Yep, worked perfectly for East Germany, USSR and works great for North Korea.
An omniscient committee of a dozen party members will know better than hundreds of millions what is better for the hundreds of millions because humans are alike and predictable. /s
Try to drive a bus by having the dozen passengers fight with each other. That probably isn't going to work.
I think that governance by having everybody fight with each other only serves the strongest fighters. And of course these strong fighters will tell everybody that this system is the best of all possible systems.
> Try to drive a bus by having the dozen passengers fight with each other
A bus is a different from a country. Also, in a bus, imagine the bus driver dictating where the passengers should get down and what they should listen to, what they should think, if their windows should be rolled up, etc.
I get your point. You need a bus driver (I agree that we need regulated markets), but the bus driver shouldn't be overbearing.
Yep, worked perfectly for East Germany, USSR and works great for North Korea.
An omniscient committee of a dozen party members will know better than hundreds of millions what is better for the hundreds of millions because humans are alike and predictable. /s