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David Brin

David Brin
Location
San Diego, California, USA
Birthday
October 06
Bio
http://www.davidbrin.com David Brin’s novels have been translated into more than twenty languages, including New York Times Best-sellers that won Hugo and Nebula awards. His 1989 ecological thriller, Earth, foreshadowed cyberwarfare, the World Wide Web, global warming and Gulf Coast flooding. A 1998 Kevin Costner film was loosely adapted from his post-apocalyptic novel, The Postman. ............................................ Brin is a noted scientist, futurist and speaker who appears frequently on television (Life After People, The Universe), discussing trends in the near and far future, on subjects such as surveillance, technology, astronomy, and SETI. His non-fiction book, The Transparent Society, deals with issues of openness and security in the wired-age. ............................................. David Brin web site: http://www.davidbrin.com http://davidbrin.blogspot.com/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/DavidBrin1 Facbook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/David-Brin/22358129265

Editor’s Pick
SEPTEMBER 15, 2011 1:51AM

Competitive Enterprise or Idolotry of Property?

Rate: 8 Flag

Even conservatives now admit that conservatism has changed.  Take the Ronald Reagan who Republican activists idolize in abstract; in real life he raised taxes, increased regulations, signed environmental laws, and (worst of all) negotiated countless compromise give-and-take, pragmatic measures in tandem with a Congress run by the other party. As did Barry Goldwater and William F. Buckley, giants who argued with genteel courtesy and who revered both knowledge and intellect, especially science.  Even the most fervid Tea Party aficionado would avow that today’s GOP has little room for such things – as Goldwater and Buckley themselves proclaimed, to their dismay, before they died.

In this analysis, I’d like to focus on one of the directions that conservatism has gone a-wandering.  But note first: I’ll try to do this without taking a single position that could fairly be called even slightly left-of center - by the old standards at least.

My entire critique will be from what used to be a completely conservative perspective. You’ll know this by the historical figure whom I cite above all others.

It begins provocatively, with prominent online commentator John Robb, who offers a simple… and clearly-correct… explanation for the gross mismanagement of the U.S. economy in the 21st Century - an appraisal that seems both tragically on-target and stunningly ironic. Ironic in ways I plan to elaborate -- and I expect you'll not look at the hoary old “left-vs-right” axis in the same way, ever again.

For starters, Robb shows that the patron saints of modern libertarianism and conservatism -- including Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek -- were right in their core message...

.... proving that today’s peculiarly myopic libertarians and conservatives are wrong in theirs.

The Smithian Fundamental

In order to grasp that apparent contradiction, let’s start by asking: what did Smith and Hayek say?

No, it wasn't "laissez faire" or  social darwinism or extolling the virtues of greed. Though both men praised private enterprise and market initiative, they did not share today's idolatry of personal and family wealth as the fundamental sacrament of economics. Those who most-frequently bandy Smith's name appear never to have cracked open a page of "The Wealth of Nations" or 'The Theory of Moral Sentiments."

Rather, Adam Smith essentially founded our modern phase of the Western Enlightenment by anchoring a central postulate -- one that Pericles and Locke discussed earlier, and that others, like Hayek, later embellished. The postulate that human beings are supreme rationalizers and self-deceivers.

Moreover, across 4,000 years we’ve seen that whenever a small group of men become powerful enough to control an economy and command-allocate its resources, they will do so according to biased perceptions, in-group delusions and fatally limited knowledge. Whether they do the normal oligarchic thing -- cheating for self-interest -- or else sincerely try to “allocate for the good of all,” they will generally do it badly. As a blatant recent example, Robb cites the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The reason for this failure was that the Soviets relied on central planning.  A system of economic governance where small group of people -- in the Soviet Unions case bureaucrats -- had all the decision making power.  They decided what was spent and where.  Even with copious amount of information, they decided badly. Why did they decide badly?  The massive economy of a modern superstate is too complex for a small group of people to manage.  Too much data.  Too many uncertainties.  Too many moving parts."

Indeed, the transformation of modern China from a Maoist calamity to a mercantilist success story began with their abandonment of nit-picking central planning in favor of capitalist-style enterprise.  Of course, the Chinese ruling caste retained overall control, “guiding” categories of credit and investment while executing a grand mercantilist strategy, the same process that Japan accomplished masterfully, during its own rapid primary and secondary phases of export-driven economic development.

Alas, for Japan, (but as a few of us forecast in the 1980s), national development eventually hits a tertiary phase when simple-minded, predatory mercantilism breaks down. If history and human nature are any guide, the Chinese will hit the same “wall” when economic complexity surpasses the ability of any planner-elite to comprehend or manage.  For all his faults - and the many ways he's misinterpreted - Friedrich Hayek understood this well. He showed how it turns skilled planners into smug blunderers.

Now this barrier can shift, as computers and sophisticated models let rulers  extend their period of competence a bit longer. (It helps, apparently, that nearly all of the top Chinese leaders began their careers as engineers, responsible for actual goods or services, not as lawyers, politicians or “business majors.”)

Still, however you look at it, there is no way that the old ruling principle that held in 99% of human societies -- “Guided Allocation of Resources” or GAR -- could possibly work in a tertiary economy as intricate as the United States. As Robb continues:

The only way to manage an economy as complex as this is to allow massively parallel decision making.  A huge number of economically empowered people making small decisions, that in aggregate, are able to process more data, get better data (by being closer to the problem), and apply more brainpower to weighing alternatives than any centralized decision making group.”

Now all of this may sound surprisingly well... "libertarian"... given that both Robb and I are highly critical of today's right! But bear with us, because what's at issue is a fundamental conflation and betrayal of the very essence of those movements. The ultimate irony and hypocrisy.

What Robb describes here is the central discovery, not only of Smith and Locke, but of Benjamin Franklin and the American framers... as well as Galileo and the founders of modern science. Ever since civilization began, nearly all societies were dominated by centralized oligarchies, priesthoods or hierarchies who ruled on policy, resource-allocation and Truth for 4,000 years of general incompetence mixed with brutal oppression.

Today, by sharp contrast, all three of the Enlightenment’s great arenas -- democracy, markets and science -- feature a revolutionary structure that broke with the oligarchic past. The old, arrogant, top-down approach was replaced with something else. Something that great Pericles described 2,000 years earlier, during the brief Athenian Renaissance.

The most creative force in the universe. The principle that propels evolution, in nature, and that brought humanity into existence -- Competition.

Elsewhere I’ve called the Enlightenment’s principal tool Reciprocal Accountability (RA). But it really is just another way to say "get everybody competing."

By dividing and separating power and -- more importantly -- empowering the majority with education, health, rights and knowledge, we enabled vast numbers of people to participate in markets, democracy and science. This has had twin effects, never seen in earlier cultures.

1) It means everybody can find out when a person stumbles onto something cool, better or right, even if that person came from a poor background.

2) It allows us to hold each other accountable for things that are wrong, worse or uncool, even when the bad idea comes at us from someone mighty.

Never perfectly implemented(!) -- this reciprocally competitive system nevertheless dealt far better than any predecessor with that problem of human delusion. None of us can see and correct all our own errors, past a cloud of rationalizations. But when RA is healthy, then criticism flows. And others will happily point out your errors, for you. (What a deal!) And I’m sure you're happy to return the favor.

The result? An Enlightenment Civilization fostered by Smith, Locke, Franklin etc., but propelled by tens of millions of eager participants. Inarguably the most successful of all time, cutting through countless foolish notions that held sway for millennia -- like the assumption that your potential is predetermined by who your father was -- while unleashing creativity, knowledge, freedom, and positive-sum wealth to a degree that surpassed all other societies, combined.

Even the most worrisome outcomes of success, like overpopulation, wealth stratification and environmental degradation, come accompanied by good news. Like the fact that so many of us are aware, involved, reciprocally critical, and eager to innovate better ways.

Lip Service to Wisdom

So, what’s that irony I spoke of, earlier? How does this central principle turn around and bite today's libertarians and conservatives, proving many of them fools?

Clearly, Everything I’ve said, so far, ought to make a libertarian or conservative happy!  Indeed, my nonfiction book The Transparent Society is all about how open (Hayekian) information flows can empower reciprocal accountability and competition, the things that make democracy and markets and science great. (There have never been humans more inherently competitive than scientists; try talking to one, some time.)

So where’s the problem? The problem is that it’s all lip service on the right! Those who most-loudly proclaim Faith In Blind Markets (FIBM) are generally also those proclaiming idolatry of private property as a pure, platonic essence, a tenet to be clutched with religious tenacity, as it was in feudal societies. Obdurate, they refuse to see that they are conflating two very different things.

Private property - as Adam Smith made clear - is a means for encouraging the thing he really wanted: fair and open competition.  But anyone who actually read Smith also knows that he went on and on about that "fair and open" part! Especially how excessive disparities of wealth and income destroy competition. Unlike today's conservatives, who grew up in a post-WWII flattened social order without major wealth-castes, Smith lived immersed in class-rooted oligarchy, of the kind that ruined markets, freedom and science across nearly 99% of human history. He knew the real enemy, first hand and denounced it in terms that he never used for mere bureaucrats.

When today's libertarians praise the creative power of competition, then ignore the propertarianism that poisons it, we are witnessing historical myopia and dogmatic illogic, of staggering magnitude.

The Irony of Faith in Blind Markets

When Adam Smith gets oversimplified into a religious caricature, what you get is "faith in blind markets" - or FIBM - a dogma that proclaims the State should have no role in guiding economic affairs, in picking winners of losers, or interfering in the maneuvers or behavior of capitalists.  Like many caricatures, it is based on some core wisdom. As Robb points out. The failure of Leninism shows how state meddling can become addictive, excessive, meddlesome and unwise.  There is no way that 100,000 civil servants, no matter how well-educated, trained, experienced, honest and well-intentioned, can have enough information, insight or modeling capability to replace the market's hundreds of millions of knowing players.  Guided Allocation of Resources (GAR) has at least four millennia of failures to answer for.

But in rejecting one set of knowledge-limited meddlers -- 100,000 civil servants -- libertarians and conservatives seem bent on ignoring market manipulation by 5,000 or so aristocratic golf buddies, who appoint each other to company boards in order to vote each other titanic "compensation packages" while trading insider information and conspiring together to eliminate competition.

Um... in what way is this kind of market "blind"? True, you have gelded the civil servants who Smith praised as a counter-balancing force against oligarchy.  But the 5,000 golf buddies -- despite their free market rhetoric -- are still reverting to GAR. To guided allocation, only in even smaller numbers, operating according to oligarchic principles of ferocious self-interest that go back to at least Nineveh.

If you want to explore this further, including how the notions of "allocation" and "faith in blind markets" get weirdly reversed, and how Smith and Hayek are betrayed by the people who tout them the most, see:

http://davidbrin.blogspot.com/2006/06/allocation-vs-markets-ancient-struggle.html

Hence, at last, the supreme irony.  Those who claim most-fervent dedication to the guiding principle of competition and enterprise -- our neighbors who call themselves conservative and libertarian -- have been talked into conflating that principle with something entirely different. Idolatry of private wealth, sacred and limitless. A dogmatic-religious devotion that reaches its culmination in the hypnotic cantos of Ayn Rand. Or in the Norquist pledge to cut taxes on the rich, without limit and despite the failure of Supply Side predictions ever, ever, every coming true.

An idolatry that leads, inevitably to the ruination of all competition and restoration of the traditional human social order that ruled our ancestors going back to cuneiform tablets -- Feudalism.

Growing past the "left-right axis"

Let's be clear. Every aspect of my argument, today, was from the perspective of an admirer of Adam Smith, of market enterprise, science and freedom. Not a single thing referred to socialist or left-wing parts of the spectrum.  Sure, I hinted that some liberal endeavors -- e.g. mass education, civil rights, child nutrition and national infrastructure etc. -- empowered greater numbers of citizens to join the fair and open process of Smithian competition. But Smith was called "the first liberal" and liberalism isn't "lefty" anyway.

No. This indictment of today's right was made entirely from the core postulates of the libertarian right.  Indeed, what Robb points out - and that I elaborated here - is a reason for sincere libertarians and conservatives to awaken and rebel against the hijacking of their movements.

This is an internal matter, a cancer within libertarianism and conservatism. If there are still honest and smart men and women within those old and noble traditions, they should think carefully, observe and diagnose the illness.  They should face the contradiction. Discuss the conflation. Choose the miracle of creative competition over an idolatry of cash.

They should stand up.

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adam smith, robb, libertarian

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The behaviors evident in the actions of the major players of the corporate and financial sectors who openly display all the ferocity and avoidance of legal integrity attributed to the Mafia is rather unlikely to respond to calls for decency and reasonable policies even if it might make good sense in the long term. To request that is totally naive.
Buckley, Kirk and Goldwater's conservatism is dead, and what passes as conservatism today represents, in significant ways, things they rejected. It's fun to use conservatism to argue against Conservatism, and easier than most think it would be. Not that the Luddites that call themselves Conservatives would understand it, but it's fun for those of us who do.

Our Conservatarians long ago and conveniently forgot Free Market is usually followed by that Competition word. I suspect the Free word is just there because it sounds good.

I have pointed out many times, in so many words, that when, for example, 4 corporations control 95% of the media market, you have The Ministry of Communications. Very similar to the Ministries of Oil and Finance. I think that when you hold the libertarian and conservative complaints about the dreaded "central planning" up against reality instead of dogma, they're really arguing about who should be doing the planning.

Suggesting this ideological internal matter should be resolved among the conservative and libertarian intelligentsia assumes such an animal exists and, to the extent it might, that it would abandon its well-funded dogma simply because reason demands it.

Reason, unlike the Koch brothers, doesn't cut fat checks to ensure it gets serviced by pseudo intellectual whores.
The elephant in the room of your analysis is Marxism. The concentration of wealth, oligarchy, plutocracy, and monopoly capitalism are all great explainers of the phenonema you describe. It's interesting that you analyze the ills of our society from the libertarian-Hayek perspective. But somehow, we both get to the same place.

Those 5,000 golf buddies have sucked up all the gravy while they've been impoverishing the social welfare sector, and it shows. We now have the buffoons and ignoramuses who call themselves the Tea Party, but they're just the products of an impoverished public education system, F*x News, and the Koch brothers. Their dominant ideology is not all that different from the Know Nothing party in the US of the 1840s and 1850s, and it shows.

And Jan Sand is right. Once those rich bastards have their billions, just try to take some of it away from them. But do you know what? Marxism will win in the end, for he correctly said that the plutocrats sow the seeds of their own destruction, and we're seeing them germinate in the European debt crisis right now, as well as China.
I don't think it can be corrected as an "internal" matter. Not now. It's like catching some disease. If you treated it right away, maybe some herbal home remedies, some rest and reflection would have cured it. Now, it's been allowed to fester for so long that we either have to consider some seriously invasive surgery or simply treat the patient with pain medication until it slips that mortal coil quietly and without remark.

If we're lucky, it will be buried in a pauper's grave with nothing more than a piece of block scribed with an all too forgettable number. Maybe then, and maybe only then, can a realistic and pragmatic wave of conservatism rejoin the rest of the human race.

And until such a time should arrive, I pray daily for it's surcease as it stands. And I ain't even remotely religious.

Loved the explication. I have to admit, Adam Smith is one of the single most ponderous writers I have yet to plod through. Is there a Cliff's Notes version that I can read?

-r-
So what magical power does your League of Extraordinary Golf Buddies (LEGB) actually have to lock competitors out of their markets? It's nothing but going to Washington and getting the legal system bent in their favor.

Consider two technically similar industries, consumer electronics and pharmaceuticals. Both are high-tech industries that require a large R & D budget from every participant. Both consume exotic materials from every part of the world. In both fields, there is an odd mixture of direct marketing to consumers and indirect marketing to those who advise consumers and compose end-user products ("Intel Inside" and "Ask your doctor about…"). Intellectual property considerations apply to both fields in the same way.

The single factor that is radically different about these two fields is the corporate culture. In electronics, there has always been a culture of Randian pure competition; in pharma, a history of constantly wheedling government to prevent competition from occurring. It's illegal to shop around for the drugs you need. Google just got fined a half billion dollars for the sin of allowing foreign medical competition to run advertising on its site. While the electronics field is so competitive that the cost of most good advice has been battered down to free, a doctor's script has the official force of law, and so do the arbitrary decisions of the untrained file clerks who work for insurance companies. Medical lobbyists can even get pure electronics defined as pharma: I know people who have paid $18,000 for a set of hearing aids that contains at most a hundred dollars worth of electronics. In general, the best racket since Scientology.

The results of this difference in corporate culture is that while the price of electronics has been declining for the last fifty years, at the same time as a steady increase in functionality, that other field in my example has long since priced itself out of the market and is now making deals to have governments print more money to pay the bills it imposes on the public. This is an example not of market failure, but of what happens when you can lobby governments for exemption from the laws of economics.
there is a vast difference between democracy and elective oligarchy, the system of nearly all western societies. that difference looks like driving humanity into economic and/or environmental disaster, and its economic avatar of capitalism inserts debilitating local collapses as well.

you can not have a transparent society without democracy, nor effective feedback without transparency. modern computational and communication power probably makes managed society possible, but realizing the power of democracy and effective management would discommode the current gatekeepers and rentiers, so it's not going to happen without struggle. most likely not going to happen at all, because humanity is testing the resilience of the earth and it may well be a test to failure.
Good points agore... electronics vs. pharma. However, the answers aren't so simple.

If I buy a bad computer, I get mad. I take it back, I complain, I never buy another one. Bad Computer Company dies, rightfully so, and I go on and buy a Good Computer. Problem solved.

If I take a badly-researched drug, I might die. I might become permanently injured or disabled. As a consumer, I have to rely on some (ideally independent) 3rd party, like the government, to oversee the drug company to make sure that what my doctor prescribes won't kill me.

I don't know how to solve the problem, but it's almost not fair to compare tech to pharma. The stakes are too high in pharma to allow it to create the Apple Newton willy-nilly, then just discard it as a bad job when it doesn't work as advertised.
"If I take a badly-researched drug, I might die. I might become permanently injured or disabled. As a consumer, I have to rely on some (ideally independent) 3rd party, like the government, to oversee the drug company to make sure that what my doctor prescribes won't kill me."

A badly designed PC power supply could kill me too. When I buy electronics, the stamp of approval of Underwriters Laboratories, a private organization, has been shown by experience to be a good guide to raw product safety. But because UL is private, it has no coercive powers. Other testing organizations, like Consumer Reports, can compete with it. Testing organizations with specialized foci, such as testing banking software for flaws that could expose your accounts to hackers, appeal more to some buyers than to others. And because no single testing service has the government-given powers to force its opinions on buyers, any testing organization that goes corrupt is swiftly replaced by one that shoppers trust more.

The FDA, on the other hand, has supreme power because it's the government. Leftists criticize the FDA as a tool of pharma, but there's nothing they can do about it. Like every other player in the medical-industrial complex, it's had the law written to make it illegal to compete.
"A badly designed PC power supply could kill me too."
This is facetious pure and simple. You'd have pretty much purposely design a computer to kill you. Very much a different thing for pharma.
"A badly designed PC power supply could kill me too."
This is facetious pure and simple. You'd have pretty much purposely design a computer to kill you. Very much a different thing for pharma.
Spectacular post...spectacular reasoning...spectacular presentation.

Wow!

Not to nitpick, though, one quote I would question (I suspect it a typo):

Or in the Norquist pledge to cut taxes on the rich, without limit and despite the failure of Supply Side predictions ever, ever, every coming true.
"The most creative force in the universe. The principle that propels evolution, in nature, and that brought humanity into existence -- Competition."

That's why the most important show on television is "Dancing With The Stars."
As for Ronnie Raygun

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MfqhByIba4
I didn't realized Old New Lefty had been released again... that's great news!

Try and keep your nose clean this time, Comrade.

Remember, it's five hundred yards from schools and playgrounds.
Watching commies at play is always an amusing past time...
It is in the nature of capital to concentrate - and therefore for competition to decrease. Therefore the purpose of government intervening is to prevent it from happening. It's really quite simple.

In my 50 years in business, I never once thought about letting up on my competition. I wanted to destroy them; garner a larger share of my market; make them go away, so as to increase my profits.

Thankfully, there were rules by which I had to play the great game. People like Stephen Guy Hardin (above) don't get that one can be a capitalist and a believer in the primary role of government in an economic system.

It's far easier to just call people like us "commies."

Good post (a little lengthy, but good!)
What I can't for the life of me figure out is why "lefties" insist that the Tea party supports what Rush refers to as "The Ruling Class" (Intellectuals, politicians, lawyers, and bankers- Country Club Republicans and Crony Capitalist Corporations like Chase Bank and G.E.)

We are demanding local level, controllable centers of power, rather than the bloated central gravy train that the federal government has become. As Agore points out, there is no competition under the federal government, so its oligarchs attempt to control us "For our own good" ( and their crony capitalist's profit).

The single thing that would do most towards bringing back "government by the people" and restoring market economy would be to make congress and the rest of the federal government stay in their home districts and meet and vote by Internet. Nothing reminds our politicians who they work for more than the possibility of having to face them in person on a daily basis.

Another helpful move would be to uproot the rest of the federal bureaucracy and transplant it to North Dakota.
It would then take at least a few years for the lobbyists on the east coast to regroup.

There is reason to the notion of periodically turning the rascals out, so that we can start out with a new batch of less skilled rascals.
I have to disagree with you just a bit. because your first premise troubled me I couldn't continue reading it. I kept thinking about the major error at the start. Sorry.

You say that China did very well embracing capitalism.

I disagree. China did very well by getting the permission from Reagan to sell its goods, dramatically subsidized, and to sell the goods formally produced by American corporations, at remarkably lower prices than good could be produced here. That reduced inflation here and caused the depression in which we find ourselves today.

That isn't capitalism it's theft.

China didn't embrace capitalism. All producers in China are either 50% or 100% owned by the Government.

The conservatism of the Tea Party and the older Conservatives isn't that different. Goldwater wasn't Mr. nice guy. He did make statements about nuclear war that I remembered for years. He and others like him closely resemble the neo-cons and the Tea Party people of today. Their ideas were all half baked.

Ronald Reagan brought us to our knees today. His ghost still threatens to bring us 1929 all over again. And Goldwater was their grand dad.

Not to belabour a point check out my posts The only good medicine is free medicine and The Wealthy and ttttttaxes.

But please keep writing.
Outstanding, and timly. It needs to be repeated that "private" property -- and like corporations, actually -- do not exist in a state of nature but are creatures of law, of the state, and are created for social purposes.

In simpler times, the biggest or the strongest or the fiercest would grab the best land for themselves and then recruit some priestly class to beguile the masses into believing their faith in their God compelled them to accept without comment or complaint this arbitrary division of property and the rigid caste system that went with it.

Such self-justifying rationalizations have always been a much harder sell for American elites. That is because the same laissez faire capitalism that brought down feudalism's landed nobility and replaced it with a market-based bourgeoisie had to share equal billing with that other inheritance we get from the Enlightenment - political democracy - with its inconvenient declarations about all men being created equal and possessed with God-given rights to life, liberty and happiness.

The renowned 18th century jurist William Blackstone, whose Commentaries on the Laws of England shaped the Founding Father's own legal thinking, embodied the American Republic's split personality when it came to the question of the true nature of property: whether property was a common inheritance ultimately entrusted to some legitimate authority charged with ensuring property was used wisely and for the general good, or whether it was the material extension of not only our inalienable rights but also of our very being, whose "sacred" character gave to property's individual owners a "sole and despotic dominion" to do with that property whatever they willed.

Like many other thinkers of his time, notably John Locke, Blackstone listed life, liberty and property as "the three absolute rights inherent in every Englishman."

Yet, as Walter Lippmann, notes, in declaring an "absolute" right to property, Blackstone was also a civilized man with a civilized man's recognition that an absolute right to anything that affected other people's lives "cannot seriously be entertained," for to do so was to "put oneself outside the law and the bounds of civility."

Ultimately, Lippmann said that Blackstone was a "tragic figure," tortured by the contradiction between his inner conscience and his public declarations about "absolute" rights of property - a contradiction that continues to bedevil American politics today.

Blackstone privately saw the imperative for the public regulation of private property through law. He saw, said Lippmann, that permitting owners to use their property without restraint had "inevitably produced intolerable evils." Allowing owners to use their property without regulation did grave damage to their neighbors and to their descendants, said Lippmann. It ruined the fertility of the land. It allowed owners to destructively exploit the minerals under the surface, to burn and cut forests, to destroy wild life, to pollute streams, to corner supplies and form monopolies, to hoard land and resources, and finally to exploit "the feeble bargaining power of wage earners."

An absolute right to property allowed these owners to act, in short, just like American oligarchs today who have grown up in the post-Ronald Reagan era of laissez faire fetishizing, where societies are preyed upon by resource-grabbing predators and find themselves without the remedies to counteract these obvious wrongs because they have lost what Lippmann calls "the tradition that property is the creation of the law for social purposes."