In Paul Ryan's own words (delivered at CPAC this year): "There are those who say modern society is too complicated for the
average man or woman to deal with. This is a long-standing argument, but
we heard it more frequently after the mortgage credit collapse and
financial meltdown in 2008. They say we need more experts and
technocrats making more of our economic decisions for us. And they argue
for less “political interference” with the enlightened bureaucrats … by
which they mean less objection by the people to the overregulation of
society.
If we choose to have a federal government that tries to solve every
problem, then as long as society keeps growing more complex, government
must keep on growing right along with it. The rule of law by the people
must be reduced and the arbitrary discretion of experts expanded. . .
If the average American can’t handle complexity in his or her own
life, and only government experts can … then government must direct the
average American about how to live his or her life. Freedom becomes a
diminishing good.
But there’s a major flaw in this “progressive’”
argument, and it’s this. It assumes there must be someone or some few
who do have all the knowledge and information. We just have to find,
train, and hire them to run the government’s agencies.
Friedrich Hayek called this collectivism’s “fatal conceit.” The idea
that a few bureaucrats know what’s best for all of society, or possess
more information about human wants and needs than millions of free
individuals interacting in a free market is both false and arrogant. It
has guided collectivists for two centuries down the road to serfdom —
and the road is littered with their wrecked utopias. The plan always
fails!
Read more here: http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2012/08/its-ryan.php
1 comment:
Yea I'm also being tired of being told I'm stupid.
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