Mia Wong
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah, well, it's because like, but like specifically, like the evil entrenched interests have taken over the state. You don't have the power to access the things that they do, which is obviously, you know, like it is obviously true that these people have control of the state and you don't. But this sort of controlled opposition of if you put us in power, we'll eliminate parts of the state.
Yeah, well, it's because like, but like specifically, like the evil entrenched interests have taken over the state. You don't have the power to access the things that they do, which is obviously, you know, like it is obviously true that these people have control of the state and you don't. But this sort of controlled opposition of if you put us in power, we'll eliminate parts of the state.
Yeah, well, it's because like, but like specifically, like the evil entrenched interests have taken over the state. You don't have the power to access the things that they do, which is obviously, you know, like it is obviously true that these people have control of the state and you don't. But this sort of controlled opposition of if you put us in power, we'll eliminate parts of the state.
We'll get rid of all this regulation that you can suddenly be in power. This has always been a controlled opposition thing, you know, and this is disappears in the form of sort of libertarianism or like on the most extreme end, anarcho-capitalism. Yeah.
We'll get rid of all this regulation that you can suddenly be in power. This has always been a controlled opposition thing, you know, and this is disappears in the form of sort of libertarianism or like on the most extreme end, anarcho-capitalism. Yeah.
We'll get rid of all this regulation that you can suddenly be in power. This has always been a controlled opposition thing, you know, and this is disappears in the form of sort of libertarianism or like on the most extreme end, anarcho-capitalism. Yeah.
And this is something that the Montpelier Society, which is like the people who basically invented neoliberalism and where all of their academics come from, they still have conferences.
And this is something that the Montpelier Society, which is like the people who basically invented neoliberalism and where all of their academics come from, they still have conferences.
And this is something that the Montpelier Society, which is like the people who basically invented neoliberalism and where all of their academics come from, they still have conferences.
They've always had a problem with this, where there's always been a branch of anarcho-capitalists there who think the only thing that the state should do is enforce contracts or just that it shouldn't exist and everything should just be brand new. Yeah. And the neoliberals are like, okay, you guys are fucking ridiculous.
They've always had a problem with this, where there's always been a branch of anarcho-capitalists there who think the only thing that the state should do is enforce contracts or just that it shouldn't exist and everything should just be brand new. Yeah. And the neoliberals are like, okay, you guys are fucking ridiculous.
They've always had a problem with this, where there's always been a branch of anarcho-capitalists there who think the only thing that the state should do is enforce contracts or just that it shouldn't exist and everything should just be brand new. Yeah. And the neoliberals are like, okay, you guys are fucking ridiculous.
And the reason they think this is that the actual thing that these people believe, and this is something that if you read more Hayek than just like the road to serfdom, right? That's like the stuff for public consumption.
And the reason they think this is that the actual thing that these people believe, and this is something that if you read more Hayek than just like the road to serfdom, right? That's like the stuff for public consumption.
And the reason they think this is that the actual thing that these people believe, and this is something that if you read more Hayek than just like the road to serfdom, right? That's like the stuff for public consumption.
If you read the stuff that you write for public consumption, if you read sort of like Rokey and you read all of the sort of theorists who develop what becomes the IMF and, you know, you go through all the different schools, what they actually believe is Contra the things that they say were like, oh, markets naturally emerge and the state just like exists to control them.
If you read the stuff that you write for public consumption, if you read sort of like Rokey and you read all of the sort of theorists who develop what becomes the IMF and, you know, you go through all the different schools, what they actually believe is Contra the things that they say were like, oh, markets naturally emerge and the state just like exists to control them.
If you read the stuff that you write for public consumption, if you read sort of like Rokey and you read all of the sort of theorists who develop what becomes the IMF and, you know, you go through all the different schools, what they actually believe is Contra the things that they say were like, oh, markets naturally emerge and the state just like exists to control them.
What they believe is that you have to use the state specifically to create markets and you have to use the state to discipline workers through just pure violence until they become sort of like good neoliberal market subjects. You go to work, go home, buy things and do nothing else. And the product of this is the 1980s, right?
What they believe is that you have to use the state specifically to create markets and you have to use the state to discipline workers through just pure violence until they become sort of like good neoliberal market subjects. You go to work, go home, buy things and do nothing else. And the product of this is the 1980s, right?