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7.23.2004
 Quote of the Day: Let's Not Have a Czar 
The headlines on the 9/11 Commission feature the call for a "spy czar."  The best response to this suggestion was given by James Woolsey, former head of the CIA, whom I watched on C-Span a couple of days ago.  In rough paraphrase (I am working from memory), he said:  "Can't we drop this word 'czar'?  Five hundred years of autocracy and incompetence that culminated in the Bolshevik Revolution is not a model to be emulated."

There is a property rights and markets point here. The idea  that we can set up a perfect hierarchy with one grand decisionmaker who will then save us is delusional, in any area.  Whether one is thinking about a company, a government, or a society, one must trust one's culture and civilization. Authority of various sorts is necessary, but basically a society must nurture the growth of institutions and rules that permit all of its members to bring their full powers of intellect and energy to bear, not put its faith in some super-wise czar.

History shows that property rights and markets are among the most important of these institutions, right up there with representative assemblies. A challenge to thinkers about organizations and hierarchies is the development of institutions and rules that can serve the same functions in these contexts that property rights and markets serve in the economy and society at large.
posted by James DeLong : 7/23/2004 08:05:36 AM

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Home Page
7.23.2004
 Quote of the Day: Let's Not Have a Czar 
The headlines on the 9/11 Commission feature the call for a "spy czar."  The best response to this suggestion was given by James Woolsey, former head of the CIA, whom I watched on C-Span a couple of days ago.  In rough paraphrase (I am working from memory), he said:  "Can't we drop this word 'czar'?  Five hundred years of autocracy and incompetence that culminated in the Bolshevik Revolution is not a model to be emulated."

There is a property rights and markets point here. The idea  that we can set up a perfect hierarchy with one grand decisionmaker who will then save us is delusional, in any area.  Whether one is thinking about a company, a government, or a society, one must trust one's culture and civilization. Authority of various sorts is necessary, but basically a society must nurture the growth of institutions and rules that permit all of its members to bring their full powers of intellect and energy to bear, not put its faith in some super-wise czar.

History shows that property rights and markets are among the most important of these institutions, right up there with representative assemblies. A challenge to thinkers about organizations and hierarchies is the development of institutions and rules that can serve the same functions in these contexts that property rights and markets serve in the economy and society at large.
posted by James DeLong : 7/23/2004 08:05:36 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  Witnesses for Hearing on S. 2560
P2P and Filtering
Antitrust Retrospective
Markets Affect Type of Files on P2P Networks
The Free Market Garden
Good Article on Inducing Infringement & Sony
Hearing on S. 2560 (Inducing Infringement)
Video of ICAC Event on the DMCA
Today's Menu
NYT Rejoinder
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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