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- iHaveNet.com: Economy
by Jonah Goldberg
On the last day of 2009, that awful year, I was
listening to a report on
I don't want to single out Inskeep, since he was doing what pretty much the entire media establishment has done, particularly of late: reducing "capitalism" to its alleged sins.
And that's the point. There are few areas of life where a thing responsible for so much good gets so little credit for it.
Imagine if I were to collect the most infamous deeds of
African-Americans over the last decade -- say, Michael
Vick's dog-fighting scandal and O.J. Simpson's
most recent criminal exploit -- and then put a bow on it with the phrase
"the decade in black America." What if I did the same thing with Jews?
Bernie Madoff, the face of Jewish America! Do the
scandals of Rod Blagojevich, Charlie
Rangel and John Edwards define the
Consider
Indeed, speaking of the decade in capitalism,
In a similar vein, the decade of capitalism saw one of the world's
richest men, Warren Buffett, pledge more than
$30 billion to a foundation created by another offspring
of capitalism, Bill Gates, for the purpose of aiding
the world's poor. Surely capitalism should get some of the credit, since
the book on philanthropy in non-capitalist systems is shorter than the
guide to cities without
Capitalism doesn't just create generous wealthy people, but generous poor people, too. Americans give twice as much to charity as the most generous European nations, and the most generous Americans are, in fact, poor Americans.
But forget philanthropy. Since 2000, hundreds of millions of people in China and India -- home to a plurality of the world's poor -- have lifted themselves out of poverty and illiteracy thanks to capitalism.
China started to embrace markets as a last resort in the late 1970s. And by last resort, I mean last resort. First they tried murdering tens of millions of their own people through collectivism and oppression. When that didn't work, they embraced markets, and the poverty rate dropped from 64 percent to around 8 percent today.
As it always does, capitalism drove innovation over the last decade.
The BlackBerry was introduced in 1999, but the iPhone didn't exist in
2000, nor did the iPod. YouTube was a fantasy, and no one could even
imagine why you'd ever need something like
Every good thing capitalism helps produce -- from singing careers to cures for diseases to staggering charity -- is credited to some other sphere of our lives. Every problem with capitalism, meanwhile, is laid at her feet. Except the problems with capitalism -- greed, theft, etc. -- aren't capitalism's fault, they're humanity's. Socialist countries have greedy thieves, too.
Free markets are in disrepute these days, particularly by the people
running Washington. For them, government is the
solution and capitalism is the problem. If they have their way over the
next decade, they won't cure what allegedly ails capitalism -- people
will still steal and lie -- but they will impede everything that makes
capitalism great. And that will be bad for everyone, even
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Capitalism Fingered as Fiend of the Past Decade | Jonah Goldberg