Kyle Montanio on Nostr: I think where we probably disagree most is how much 'free choice' there is in our ...
I think where we probably disagree most is how much 'free choice' there is in our system. If folks have the 'choice' to work at their minimum wage job during a pandemic or lose their house, I define that closure to coercion, if not exploitation.
Obviously your example is different, but I see most of the world - the poor - as having almost no free choice and, thus, see capitalism as a failure of equity (and also efficiency, but that's a whole other argument unrelated to this post).
Obviously your example is different, but I see most of the world - the poor - as having almost no free choice and, thus, see capitalism as a failure of equity (and also efficiency, but that's a whole other argument unrelated to this post).