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OR, there are plenty of the left leaning and centrists that don't want to see 'big business' fail or bring down people who have worked hard to make a living for their family and themselves so that the workshy and layabouts can have it easy....
.... but recognise the facts that:
i) there are severe imbalances in the distribution of wealth both within individual societies and globally.
There is strong evidence to suggest that a considerable amount of crime and problems are exacerbated by the gap between those that have and those that don't.
Having no gap tends to lead to a lack of motivation to achieve, while having a large gap tends to raises the level of crime and reduce the general happiness and wellbeing of the population as a whole.
ergo, there is for any society a optimum gap between those at the top and those at the bottom where motivation is sufficiently high enough to grow the economy while crime is low and health and wellbeing are high enough to encourage people to spend, travel, and take less time of sick.
ii) business, corporations and markets are essentially amoral and as such do not act in the best interests of mankind without being regulated, reigned in and placed under certain controls and restrictions. That is not to say some regulations or controls are poor or mistakes, but that does not equate to regulations and controls being bad as long as they are well thought out and/or managed.
With the right regulations and controls, businesses and markets can thrive, bring prosperity and further advance societies and the wellbeing of mankind - a lack of regulations and controls can and historically has led to societies being decimated, human suffering and the strongest few accumulating everything.
iii) society needs a broad mix of personalities and types to run smoothly, efficiently and for the benefit of all both for it's health and it's wealth.
We need movers and shakers as well as more altruistic types - we need those that invent and imagine and those that are content to just work as a means to keep their family happy and healthy.
The markets however tend to value and reward the movers and shakers at the expense of the altruists because the market's 'system' of effort and reward does not consider the greater systems of society that actually allows it to exist and thrive in the first place.
That being providing consumers, keeping them healthy, providing them with education and training, keeping them safe, putting out their fires, maintaining their roads and transport links.
Without all that, markets are starved. |
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