Upward Social Mobility Part 3: Free Markets Destroy vs Create

October 07, 2020 00:22:33
Upward Social Mobility Part 3: Free Markets Destroy vs Create
Upward Social Mobility
Upward Social Mobility Part 3: Free Markets Destroy vs Create

Oct 07 2020 | 00:22:33

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Show Notes

Upward Social Mobility is a podcast mini series on navigating American life during COVID and a contentious political climate.

It is November of the year 2020 in the United States. Many Americans are trying to find or define life again. They are struggling with their value systems, and how that orients them in relation to living in this country. Should they aim to be rich? Should they aim to be happy? Should they go woke or broke? Or is America just a pit stop?

The term ’social mobility’ describes how we move through different stages of our lives. In this mini series, we focus on three forms of mobility -- physical, income, and transportation. These three forms of mobility are the pillars to upward social mobility in the United States.

 

Guests featured in this mini series:

 

Transcription

A bold, inspirational and first of its kind campaign to highlight free markets has hit Washington state billboards, computers, and smartphones, but it might not contain the message you'd expect. Before getting into the logic behind Washington Policy Centers' seemingly counter intuitive Free Markets Destroy advertising campaign, here's some background.

A 2019 Gallup poll showed Americans don't believe in socialism during the past few years. However, young adults overall impression of capitalism and free markets has declined steadily. Most fair-minded Washingtonians have been shocked by the recent events in Seattle's failed city leadership. Any political movement concentrated on turning Seattle into an American socialist experiment are ripping the city apart.

In Portland, a similar situation is playing out. Protesters view capitalism as the enemy, and they are intent on ruining the city's bottom line.

We have a real problem in this country. Young generations are warming to the idea of socialism and are skeptical about our free market system. They lay all of the challenges we have as a society at the feet of capitalism. What they want is change and reform. They want to destroy what's broken and replace it with something better. We are in a fight of our lives advocating for free enterprise. It's the future of the country.

What young people have never heard until now is that it's markets that actually bring about change through a process known as creative destruction or the process of continual improvement.

Free markets tear down what's broken. They take on companies and institutions that are no longer serving people. That's why Washington Policy Center this month is launching Free Markets Destroy.

This marketing campaign will focus on the power of the marketplace to destroy society's worst problems and continually improve our lives. Free markets destroy monopolies. They destroy bigotry. They destroy broken models of education. Free markets destroy pollution, hunger, poverty, and boredom.

Free markets bring us together by breaking down the barriers that stand in our way.

Consider the fact that more than a hundred companies currently are competing to find a vaccine for COVID-19. Meantime, sports have returned and a Pittsburgh company has designed a solution to clean stadiums via electrostatic drones. Free markets are destroying disease. Meantime, Walmart is partnering with Tribeca to destroy boredom by turning store parking lots into drive-in theaters. Elon Musk got America back into space in six years. And for less than $1 billion. The government committee claimed it would take more than a decade and cost $26 billion. Free markets are destroying our absence in the final frontier.

Free markets are the reason we have 1,246 genres of pop music instead of 12. The price of a 50-inch 4K HD television dropped 80% between 2012 and 2017. Free markets destroy outdated technology.

Time and time again, we witnessed the power of the free market in our everyday life. Free markets are a revolutionary force for good. It's a message young people have never heard in the way we're going to deliver it.

 

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