Maqo wrote:1) Massive strawman
Our system is not based on the assumption that congresspeople are omniscient, yet taxpayers are not allowed to choose where their taxes go. It just doesn't follow.
Maqo wrote:2) You are denying the division of labour and division of knowledge. It is possible for me to be the world's leading expert on widgets and have perfect knowledge about their supply and value, but know absolutely nothing about sprockets and their supply and value.
The division of labor is not a critique of consumer sovereignty. That you think it is reveals how little you know about how or why markets work.
Maqo wrote:3) Congresspeople could probably very easily get the supply of milk pretty much right; and they would certainly get the supply right after a very short number of cycles. Milk is essentially a commodity, with demand not going to change much from year to year, and after two years congress would be just as good at producing the right quantity of milk as the free market is. Really, milk would be orders of magnitude easier to provide than public education, where the value derived is more transcendent.
If they can get the supply "better" than consumers can, then obviously we should want them to determine exactly how much milk, forums and Brittney Spears is supplied.
Maqo wrote:4) They don't need to get the amount *exactly* right. They need to get it 'good enough', and create more value by taking advantage of collective buying power and methods of wealth creation that would be unavailable/unattractive to the free market.
In the absence of consumer decisions, how in the world can you know how close congress gets? What in the world are you comparing their decisions to? An alternate reality where taxpayers can shop for themselves?
