Y-bar a day ago

> always ends up catastrophically.

Government intervention like forbidding led-based paints or asbestos in homes? Or government intervention like doing something about the ozone depletion? Government intervention like forbidding roaming fees? Intervention like requiring 3-point seat belts? Like progressive taxation? Like forbidding discrimination based on skin colour? Like air travel safety? Like a max ceiling on credit card fees?

Always?

  • kibbber a day ago

    >Like progressive taxation? Like forbidding discrimination based on skin colour?

    Ok, sometimes.

    • Y-bar a day ago

      Give an example regulation which has objectively been catastrophic and where there has been no clear attempts at amending or improving it.

      • CamperBob2 17 hours ago

        Some off-the-cuff examples that come to mind:

        - Drastic overregulation of nuclear energy in the US, resulting in fossil-fuel pollution measurable in gigatons over the past several decades accompanied by literally countless illnesses and premature deaths.

        - Premature mandates for airbags in cars that resulted in hundreds of needless child deaths because the technology wasn't yet safe enough for universal deployment. A scenario that's playing out right now with misfeatures like automated emergency braking.

        - The Jones Act (Merchant Marine Act of 1920), whose effects are too convoluted to go into here.

        - Misguided, market-distorting housing policies, ranging across the spectrum from rent control to Proposition 13.

        - Many if not most aspects of the War on Drugs, including but not limited to mandatory minimum sentencing and de-facto hardwiring of racial bias into the justice system.

xandrius a day ago

You call it government intervention, we call it good government.

valesco a day ago

Hopefully this uniquely American push for dysfunctional government stays on their side of the ocean.

stavros a day ago

Because a monopoly extracting 30% of every purchase you make is a dream scenario?

  • tt24 15 hours ago

    How is Apple a monopoly?

    • stavros 14 hours ago

      They own the only app store you can use on an iPhone.

      • tt24 14 hours ago

        Okay, using that definition, Walmart, Target, Dollar Tree, my local regional grocery store, Trader Joe's and Ralph's are monopolies as well. They own their shelves and store space, and are the sole arbiters responsible for deciding what is sold within them.