Guided Allocation vs. Faith in Blind Markets
David Brin has a long and through provoking article on the false dichotomy that has been constructed between guided allocation and free markets. Both the left and the right are to blame for this misleading and frequently self-serving dichotomy that shapes so much of our thinking and debate. His article is especially relevant relevant as we consider how to attain global sustainability.
The article sufficiently long (over 18 pages printed) that it seems a service to excerpt the essentials without too much interspersed commentary. Hopefully this summary will encourage you to read the full article.
[T]his damnfool left-right thing has yet another aspect that I haven’t addressed before. Yet another part of a dismal dichotomy that badly needs debunking, at long last.
I am talking about the struggle between those preaching “prudent sustainability” and those who claim that market forces will solve all looming crises of poverty, pollution, energy depletion and so on.
We’ve all grown familiar with these apparently rigid “sides”, and so let me avow something from the start. If I am forced to choose between them, you can bet that I will side with the New Puritans of the sustainability crowd! They, at least, want somemodernist attention paid to assertive problem-solving, instead of preaching an indolent, pollyanna faith that some grand and superior external force will come to our rescue, averting calamity in the nick of time.
But that’s the point. I will not choose sides between the extreme poles of yet another absurd “devil’s dichotomy.” As I say here and here … we don’t have to pick between two perfectly opposite positions! In fact, that kind of inflexibility is the surest way to guarantee our failure as a civilization.
So let’s pull back from our immediate troubles, once again, and ponder how these two viewpoints may reflect assumptions that are far older and more similar than any of the adversaries think, reflecting habits of thought going back thousands of years.
In fact, there are certain ways in which doctrinaire leftists are taking up old-time feudalist positions while today’s neo-feudalists of the right seem, at first, to be standing up for the Enlightenment… only to show their truer, reactionary colors when we dig a little deeper.
