EAllusion wrote:George Gilder is wrong about pretty much anything he has ever commented on, by the way.
Fantastic admittance, unwitting or no, that your knowledge of free market economics and, more broadly speaking, praxeology - the theory and study of human action - is to the negative power. I always knew this to be the case, but thanks for substantiating my understanding will unimpeachable evidence from the horse's mouth.
But, one of the more notable things that Droopy is encouraging everyone to "deep reading on" is his belief that men are inherently superior to women in the workplace and encouraging national policy that keeps men at work and women in the kitchen. That's bad economic culture in addition to being brutally sexist.
You've opened yourself up to a CFR on this one, so jump to it, Delusion.
I'll be waiting patiently.
That's bad economic culture in addition to being brutally sexist.
Oh the politically correct humanity! Its neither. The vast entrance into the workforce of woman since the sixties has not all been a bad thing. It has also, along other dimensions, had substantial negative consequences and side effects for the culture as a whole, and especially on the viability of family, marriage, and child bearing/rearing - the foundation of the entire civil social order.
Its been a trade-off, with both positive and negative effects. On which side of the ledger this falls, positive or negative, is the question.