Mr. Milei goes to Davos

Doesn't everybody? He's the most publicized Republican since Eisenhower.

I don't, but most people do. If everybody (including yourself, obviously) obsesses over Trump, then what is your complaint?

You raised the spectre of Milei as part of this massive psyop.

I've never said he is a psyop. Between his Zionism, support for open borders and being openly libertine on most social issues, he makes it very clear who he is.

You just wanted to point out the rabbit hole? You didn't want to go in?

I'm just pointing out the obvious. Anti-Trumpers here dunk on his supporters who "obsess" over him, but constantly do it themselves.
 
I don't, but most people do. If everybody (including yourself, obviously) obsesses over Trump, then what is your complaint?

I'm not the one who was complaining.

I've never said he is a psyop. Between his Zionism, support for open borders and being openly libertine on most social issues, he makes it very clear who he is.

Well, the group you say he's a part of is running psyops. Big ones. And he is clearly counter to the Official Narrative. So, if not part of the big psyop, then, why?

I'm just pointing out the obvious. Anti-Trumpers here dunk on his supporters who "obsess" over him, but constantly do it themselves.

I thought I pointed out something obvious. Trump is imposed upon us, constantly and with considerable bandwidth and broadcast power. Many things are done, incredible amounts of money are spent, to build him up for -- something. You don't think anyone should try to anticipate what they're throwing at us?
 
wef-world-economic-forum-milei-sunny-philadelphia-plate-marxism.jpg
 
Javier Milei’s Address to the World Economic Forum
https://www.infineo.ai/articles/javier-mileis-address-to-the-world-economic-forum
{Robert P. Murphy | 18 January 2024}

On January 17, newly elected President of Argentina Javier Milei delivered a scathing address to the World Economic Forum, an organization headed by Klaus Schwab. As a self-proclaimed “anarcho-capitalist” and trained economist, Milei presented a concise case for freedom and pinpointed the specific arguments that academics use to ostensibly justify State intervention in the economy. In this post I’ll amplify some of Milei’s major points.

[video hidden to save space]
 
Argentina President Javier Milei slams elites at Davos: 'the state is the problem'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DYQQf1KjYo
{New York Post | 17 January 2024}

Argentina's libertarian President Javier Milei praised free markets and slammed socialism at Davos on Wednesday (January 17) during the first overseas tour for the self-proclaimed 'anarcho-capitalist,' who is battling to fix a major economic crisis at home.

During his speech, Milei focused on the role of the state across a wide range of activities, which he said amounted to levers of control rather than allowing citizens the freedom to prosper through their own efforts.

The trip marks a test for right-wing Milei, a relative political newcomer who took office last month after a rapid ascent from acid-tongued economist and TV pundit to the presidency. He is keen to win backing for his economic ideas, which include shutting the central bank and adopting the dollar.

Ahead of the speech, Milei met British foreign minister David Cameron and was set for a head-to-head with International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief Kristalina Georgieva, after Argentina struck a staff level agreement last week to salvage its $44 billion loan program with the fund.

Milei is battling to bring down inflation that topped 200% last year and rebuild depleted Argentina's foreign currency reserves.

He is pushing major economic reforms, including spending cuts and deregulation, in a bid to improve the government's finances and boost the economy. But he faces poverty levels which are climbing above 40% and the threat of social unrest.

0:05 – 0:49 “Today I’m here to tell you that the Western world is in danger. It is in danger because those who are supposed to defend the values of the West are co-opted by a vision of the world that leads to socialism and thereby to poverty. Unfortunately, in recent decades, motivated by some well-meaning individuals willing to help others, and others motivated by a desire to belong to a privileged class, the main leaders of the Western world have abandoned the model of freedom for different versions of what we call collectivism.”

The above framing of his remarks is a masterful move, and helps illuminate how such a radical figure like Milei won a nationwide election. He doesn’t pull any punches and accuses some of his opponents of more than mere intellectual error; no, they are attacking the underpinnings of Western values out of a lust for power and wealth. However, Milei concedes that others who are advancing the collectivist agenda are doing so because of a misguided desire to help the downtrodden.

In this way, Milei lets his hardcore supporters know that he is nobody’s fool and understands how we got into the current mess, but on the other hand, for any specific individual hearing his message, it will not come across necessarily as a personal condemnation. Because that person can think, “Oh wow, I support progressive income taxes and a vigorous central bank, but I thought those were scientifically established mechanisms for helping the poor. Let me give this strange fellow Milei a chance to show me I’ve been mistaken.”

Next Milei makes it personal, explaining that Argentina historically had been one of the richest countries in the world, and then squandered its wealth through the adoption of collectivist measures. (According to Wikipedia, on the eve of the first World War, the per capita wealth of Argentina was in the top ten globally.) Again, this is very effective rhetorically, because it’s hard for an outsider to challenge the president of Argentina—who has decades of experience working in international banking—when he matter of factly discusses the economic history of his own country.

The Hockey Stick

Some readers may be familiar with the “hockey stick” chart from the debate over climate change, but there is a similar chart having to do with global per capita income. For example, the following chart shows real (i.e. inflation-adjusted) output per person in various countries over a thousand-year stretch:

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The above chart is well known among economic historians. They differ in their precise explanations as to why the Industrial Revolution occurred in Great Britain and at the time that it did, but a growing literature stresses the necessity of strong institutions of private property and the rule of law, as well as a culture’s general admiration of and respect for the merchant class and entrepreneurs.

This context sheds light on some of Milei’s remarks in his address. At around the 5:00 mark, he says that free-trade capitalism is the only system that can end global poverty. To buttress his claim, consider these statistics:

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As the chart makes clear, there has been absolutely phenomenal progress made on the goal of eradicating “extreme poverty” (which has a precise definition) over the last two centuries. In recent decades, the introduction of pro-market reforms into communist China has lifted many millions out of destitution.

Of course there are nuances in these debates. Merely relying on the charts above, one could plausibly argue that a “mixed economy” delivers superior performance to raw laissez-faire, since the major powers were certainly not exercises in applied libertarianism from 1950 onward. However, in terms of the stark contrast between capitalism and collectivism, the evidence is overwhelming.

Besides the aggregate trends documented above, we have case studies such as North versus South Korea, and East versus West Germany. Even when we split the same culture down the middle, implementing capitalism in one and socialism in the other leads to enormous differences in the standard of living as well as personal liberties. For those interested in quantitative regression analysis, the Fraser Institute ranks countries on an Economic Freedom Index, and dozens of studies have shown the connection between scoring high on this index and doing well in terms of standard metrics of economic growth, low childhood mortality, etc.

Praising Israel Kirzner, Dissing “Market Failure”

Those of us hailing from the Austrian School were delighted to hear Milei (around 6:35) say that wealth creation comes from “what Israel Kirzner calls a market discovery process.” The context was to argue that income and wealth redistribution do not rearrange a fixed or given “pie”, but that the size of the pie itself depends critically on the underlying legal institutions and cultural norms. In contrast, Milei went on to excoriate standard neoclassical models that exhibit “market failure.” It may be useful for me to explain the difference between these two approaches.

Israel Kirzner directly studied under Ludwig von Mises while getting his PhD from New York University, and then taught there himself for decades. (I was lucky enough to have taken a course in the history of economic thought from Kirzner before he retired.) In contrast to neoclassical models that take most of the economic data as “given”—and then showcase various scenarios in which the competitive market outcome is inferior to what a hypothetical central planner might do with society’s scarce resources—Kirzner amplified points that Friedrich Hayek made in his seminal economic articles.

Specifically, in the real world we don’t know where all of the resources are located, we don’t know what the least-cost “production functions” are for turning resources into finished goods and services, and we don’t know how the consumers would rank the desirability of various potential combinations of goods and services. It is only through the institution of private property in not just personal items but also the “means of production,” as well as the use of money, that entrepreneurs can engage in economic calculation (Mises’ term) and discover better ways to serve customers.

Conclusion

Many of us are still in a state of shock that someone who is so well-versed in free-market economics ran a successful populist campaign to become the president of Argentina. We can only hope that Javier Milei can implement at least enough of his agenda in order to give his proposed reforms a serious test. Both theory and history suggest that turning away from collectivism and back towards economic liberty is not only the right thing to do, but it will also make people richer.
 
I'm not the one who was complaining.

Then why did you hijack my post to talk about something off-topic?

Well, the group you say he's a part of is running psyops. Big ones. And he is clearly counter to the Official Narrative. So, if not part of the big psyop, then, why?

Perhaps I am incorrect, but I understand psyops to be covert. Milei does not try to hide his Zionism.


I thought I pointed out something obvious. Trump is imposed upon us, constantly and with considerable bandwidth and broadcast power. Many things are done, incredible amounts of money are spent, to build him up for -- something. You don't think anyone should try to anticipate what they're throwing at us?

What does that have to do with my original post?
 
Everything is a potential psyop ain't it? I listened to most of this speech while cleaning the house. So I probably did miss some of it. Anyway the things he was saying is stuff I agree with. I think it does not hurt anything for these words to be spoken. I think Mr. Milei's speech could possibly wake some people up so I am for that.

I also think Zionism means different things to different people. To me Zion means Jerusalem . It is a place not an ism. None of the middle east stuff makes sense to me. The only thing I know for sure about the conflict is that it has been going on for eons.
 
Javier Milei at the WEF — Attacking Socialism, Defending Monopolists?
Dr. Robert Malone
January 20, 2024

[...]

It is asserted by some who study Monopolies that there is no historical evidence that natural monopolies formed before the Sherman Antitrust Act. Under this theory, the Act itself created the market interference and insecurity consequent to a vaguely worded Act which enabled the Administrative State to interpret the Act in an arbitrary and capricious manner. This very ambiguity, reinforced by the eagerness of the Administrative State to functionally create law in interpreting such ambiguity, exacerbated by the Chevron Deference Supreme Court decision, in turn gives rise to free market distortions and indirectly enables the formation of the very State-sponsored Monopolies which Jefferson warned of.

THREAD: Supreme Court to consider overruling Chevron doctrine
 
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