Thank you Nathan for posting that video again. I had seen the introductory version, but it's always nice to get refreshed. I have a few points about the logic I'd like to have explained but first I'd like to hear about these.
indipunn:What do you mean by "market forces"? Of course capitalist "worship" market forces, since a competitive marketplace is an intrinsic feature of a capitalist economy.
Is the quick emergence of monopolies also an eventual feature of a competitive arena? When you pit 4 fighters against one another does one not eventually dominate naturally? How does a DRO deter the existence of monopolies without a person paying for protection for their good and service prior to the formation? (do you pay money for your apples every month to ensure a monopoly dose not develop resulting in you paying more for apples? Seems self defeating.)
indipunn:Why can't the free market be involved in protecting the environment?
The free market should be researching into environmentally friendly fuels. Besides, his government really protected the environment? The US federal government is the biggest polluter in the United States! Also, did Chernobyl, and the subsequent contamination in neighbouring areas, occur because of free market forces? Was the USSR a bastion of laissez-faire economics?
We know the government is supposed to take care of that stuff. Your assumption is that without it, within people a generous light will go off in people that will tell them,"You are now responsible for your world." and everyone will in kind give considerable portions of their money to a fund doing research that may or may not actually result in anything that directly affects them. Is that what your saying?
indipunn: Thus, if society values environmental protection highly, then companies in the marketplace would cater to this, since in a capitalist economy people only buy goods and services that suit their needs and wants. Ultimately, no one has to purchase products from any specific supplier within the free market. There always is choice.
In a world in which people are all virtuous this system works marvelously. Too bad all systems that work have to be designed not with optimal conditions in mind, but the opposite. The same way a U.S. Abrams is an "excellent" and very advanced machine but can only operate in the desert for a few hours before having to be cleaned to keep functioning, whereas a Russian tank is engineered so simply and robustly that it's known to keep working under the harshest conditions even though it is not nearly as efficient of a machine. The resilient simple design works better because it was designed with the worst conditions in mind, whereas the Abrams was designed with optimal.
Is this system designed to function given that humanity may turn out to only choose the wrong choices, for themselves and everyone else?
Is what's good for the economy and exact measure of whats good for "us"?
“It is an interesting and demonstrable fact, that all children are atheists and were religion not inculcated into their minds, they would remain so” ~Ernestine Rose