<Snipped quote by Vilageidiotx>
Free isn't difficult to achieve, it is mathematically impossible to achieve. If a good or service was being provided at no charge there would be no incentive to provide it bevause there would be no possibility of generating a profit. When the left talks about 'free' services, they mean that the person using them doesn't necessarily have to pay at the point of use.
The difference between good economic policy and bad economic policy is that the former is good for the economy and the latter is not. If the objective of a policy or particular piece of legislation is to shift wealth around one way or another, it isn't economic policy to begin with, just the government playing Robin Hood.
Free is achievable when there is no value on an object because it takes no effort to obtain it. It's irrelevant to this conversation I know, but I couldn't say free doesn't exist at all because... well, it does. A single blade of grass won't cost you shit. Just pluck it from the ground. Likewise, what might be free in the distant future is hard to guess. But again, that's irrelevant.
Anyway, all of that aside, redistribution
is a type economic policy. It's only robin hood if the entire purpose is to be nice (which isn't entirely without value if we figure the purpose of society is to improve our collective lot, but that's a digression), there are other reasons you might want to pursue redistribution. Wealth isn't created entirely by the work of one individual; if you start a small business, it's success is based on more than just your personal gumption and know-how. As the saying goes, no man is an island. Everything we do is within the context of the society we live in. Business success relies on a work force that has access to the education it needs to achieve whatever needs to be achieved, and the quality of life necessary for them to be productive workers. And also, whatever you produce requires some sort of consumer base, whether tangentially or directly. So for wealth to be created, you want the most effective consumer base you can get, and the most effective work force you can get. We recognized this way back near the turn of the century when the government began to intervene in workers conditions, or during the Great Depression when the brooding evil of the welfare state came into being as a protection against the pancake-collapse that was the pre-welfare depressions.
With all that in mind, right now in the United States we have stagnant wages, exorbitantly priced healthcare, and a shrinking middle class. Saying that the people falling out of the system are just shit out of luck is negligent, because those people constitute the labor force
and the consumer base.
But economies do fall. That is the history of civilization. And perhaps we could say "Fine, this is the Fall of Rome. We're seeing a society in decline and that happens." Except that...
We are still creating wealth.
Our national product isn't declining. It's just the division of it that is.
Now, I'm not saying we need to completely level it out. Like, I am perfect OK with the concept of people being stinking rich. It doesn't bother me at all because in reality I am
not jealous, I'm just afraid. I know enough history that I can say, when a society ends up with such an overtly dangerous misdistribution of wealth, and when the lower classes start getting forced out of the system, dangerous shit starts happening. There are too many Americans who only need one more recession to fall down the ladder. You can only say "You guys are just jealous" before it starts to sound like "Let them eat cake", and I
really really don't want to know what will happen if the United States has a major revolution. It's fun to talk about, but it is dangerous, and the end result could be any number of ugly things.
We still have a democracy right now. The American system is amazing as far as things go, and I don't want to see it go away. If stability means higher taxes, so be it.