It is possible to regulate without interfering with the consequences of greed.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
I didn't include the "answer" because I was responding to Turq, and Turq should be very familiar to my idea of a solution.
People don't need regulation. People need to understand and accept the risks of living with beings designed for self-fulfillment. It's not greed in the typical sense, it's the basic instinct to take what we want. That's not avarice unless you can't play by a very simple rule - take what you earn.
People wanting something from nothing is the problem. People whine bitch and moan about the financial sectors and how corrupt they are, but they refuse to see that the business is built on the average joe trying to manipulate the system, trying to make an unearned percentage off what they already earned by "investing" in people they don't know and products they don't understand. When it works they have no problem taking the money, when it fails pitchforks and torches for all.
For example, making sure that people only leverage by a certain maximum ratio is just a way to keep the market more stable. There are rational reasonable limits to risk taking that should be the difference between what's legal and what isn't.
The government must play at least a minimal role in business, and even our founders understood that with things like the Contract Clause.
Now, obviously, we can debate as to what extent the government should get involved, but it's not like any reasonably advanced society was put together with limitless risk taking allowed.
I think, if anything, most of the populace has already learned a lot of lessons from this crisis. Probably the most important one is that we can no longer afford to believe in the concept of "too big to fail." Antitrust regulations need to be more strict.