Two Cheers for Capitalism, A Call for Balance
A capitalistic society does not want
more than two cheers for itself. Indeed,
it regards the impulse to give three cheers for any social, economic, or
political system as expressing a dangerous – because it is misplaced –
enthusiasm.
Irving Kristol (1920-2009), Two Cheers for Capitalism, Basic Books,
1975
Why not three cheers? Why any cheers
at all?
After all, capitalism’s excesses do
many appall.
The answer, is that
overall, above all capitalism works,
While collectivism, or social
welfare-ism , is for clerks,
Who think they know best how to set bureacratic rules,
But too often think of others as unelightened mules.
But too often think of others as unelightened mules.
Yet clerks know little about generating
wealth,
And even less about what makes for
health.
President Kennedy said capitalism can lift everyone's boat,
That it is efficient in redistributing social goods that float.
President Kennedy said capitalism can lift everyone's boat,
That it is efficient in redistributing social goods that float.
The social welfare state may glow for
the ideologue,
But ideologues get lost in mystical
anti-business fog.
They tend to think other people’s
money is their own,
That it is on loan and can be thrown
from their throne.
That
it grows willynilly from taproots of centralized trees,
That government can seize from others
what it pleases.
So government gets caught up in idealistic
enthusiasm,
It believes it is part and parcel of society’s cytoplasm.
The problem is that gov does not
perform,
When it strives and seeks society to
reform.
It gravitates towards the iron tyranny of
the D.C. status quo,
Individuals, innovators, and entrepreneurs become the foe,
As social welfare and government
dependency grows,
Government debt mounts and the economy
suffers woes.
It all boils down to a question of lack
of political balance,
Of monetary dys-equilibrium to use economic parlance.
So two cheers for capitalism, when
and where it is needed
One cheer for social equity, when capitalism
needs to be weeded.
Two cheers for market-driven health
care,
One cheer for a central system deemed “fair.”
Two cheers for a direct doctor-patient
relationship,
One cheer for intervening third party
one-upsmanship.
Two cheers for a simpler, understandable
health narrative.
One cheer for a complex confusing
healthcare.gov imperative
Tweet:
The health system badly needs a
better balance between market and health needs of consumers and demands of a
protective government.
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