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11.24.2004
 Politics & Markets 
An entry yesterday on Markets and Cooperation quoted Don Boudreaux, Chairman of George Mason University's econ department. Here is another Boudreaux saying that I quite like:

Perhaps the single greatest flaw of politics is that it encourages people to behave romantically rather than realistically — to confuse intentions with results. To dream is marvelous, wonderful, human; but to dream without constraint and regard to reality is to turn dreams into nightmares.
This is worthy to stand with my all-time favorite quotation about the regulatory mind-set: Alan Furst's description of Soviet revolutionaries during the 1920s and the catastrophes of agricultural collectivization:

[F]or twelve years -- until 1929, when Stalin finally took over -- he lived in a kind of dream world, a mythical country where idealistic intellectual[s] . . . actually ran things, quite literally, a country of the mind. Theories failed; peasants died, the land itself dried up in despair. Still they worked twenty hours a day and swore they had the answer. (Dark Star, p.60)
Whenever I read proposals to collectivize the production of IP, I think of this quotation -- especially the part about the "land itself dried up in despair."

posted by James DeLong : 11/24/2004 08:31:54 AM

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Home Page
11.24.2004
 Politics & Markets 
An entry yesterday on Markets and Cooperation quoted Don Boudreaux, Chairman of George Mason University's econ department. Here is another Boudreaux saying that I quite like:

Perhaps the single greatest flaw of politics is that it encourages people to behave romantically rather than realistically — to confuse intentions with results. To dream is marvelous, wonderful, human; but to dream without constraint and regard to reality is to turn dreams into nightmares.
This is worthy to stand with my all-time favorite quotation about the regulatory mind-set: Alan Furst's description of Soviet revolutionaries during the 1920s and the catastrophes of agricultural collectivization:

[F]or twelve years -- until 1929, when Stalin finally took over -- he lived in a kind of dream world, a mythical country where idealistic intellectual[s] . . . actually ran things, quite literally, a country of the mind. Theories failed; peasants died, the land itself dried up in despair. Still they worked twenty hours a day and swore they had the answer. (Dark Star, p.60)
Whenever I read proposals to collectivize the production of IP, I think of this quotation -- especially the part about the "land itself dried up in despair."

posted by James DeLong : 11/24/2004 08:31:54 AM

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

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  More on Patent Searches
Noninfringing Use Insurance
Desktop Searches
James Boyle on Database IP in Europe
Markets and Cooperation
The Internet and the Media
eBay
GPL Gets an Extreme Makeover
Internet Libraries
Perverse Incentives for Patent Searches
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
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  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
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