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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!curtis
- From: curtis@cs.berkeley.edu (Curtis Yarvin)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Re: support for the arts in the US
- Date: 12 Dec 1992 06:47:20 GMT
- Organization: UC Berkeley CS Dept.
- Lines: 67
- Message-ID: <1gc1toINNq96@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <td1k85o@zola.esd.sgi.com> <1g5p0cINNjf4@agate.berkeley.edu> <tdamkf8@zola.esd.sgi.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cobra.cs.berkeley.edu
-
- In article <tdamkf8@zola.esd.sgi.com> rmr@sgi.com (Robert M. Reimann) writes:
- >
- >I'm talking about keeping all the unique voices
- >that chronicle the American experience alive and shouting,
- >including those on the margins of our mass culture.
-
- Interestingly enough, I would say our disagreement is not moral
- moral but economic.
-
- You appear to think of art as a "public good." A public good is any
- good whose benefits cannot be restricted to those who pay for it.
- National defense, for example, is a public good.
-
- Free societies have an awful hard time financing public goods.
- Suppose, for example, that the United States of Atlantis (an
- up-and-coming utopia somewhere off the coast of Portugal) finds
- itself under attack by the evil Kassites - savage barbarians with
- absolutely no respect for human life and no love for anything but
- gold, broadswords, and forcible anal sodomy. If the US of A does
- not defend itself, its great civilization will be destroyed in a
- night, and its valiant citizens forced to undergo the most
- horrible and degrading tortures that man has ever devised.
-
- Fortunately, the US of A has a thriving free-market economy, which
- springs to the challenge. Prominent among the new startups is
- Joe's Defense Inc. Pay Joe's Defense a thousand zorkmids and they
- will use it to furious advantage in the cause of great Atlantis.
- No $600 hammers here. These boys are clean, lean, and mean - and
- to a man they have perfect rectal virginity.
-
- So for a while this works perfectly. But then Warren Wonk, a man of
- intense avarice but little martial spirit, hits upon a great idea.
- "Hey," he says to himself. "The Samuelsons down the street are
- still paying their Joe's Defense bill. So are the Schlumbergers.
- So are the Sungs - and the Sumbothos. So nothing bad will happen
- if I stop paying mine!" This idea spreads. Soon no one at all is
- buying Joe's Defense. The brave young men with the teflon
- sphincters run out of ammo and are overrun by the brutal Kassites.
- As this is a family newsgroup we end our story here, but the
- creative and bloody-minded among ye can surely fill in the details.
-
- Now, the traditional libertarian approach is to cast a cloak over
- one's eyes and maintain that charitable impulses will take care of
- these annoying creatures, and, furthermore, they don't exist
- anyway.
-
- Hah. Almost Communist in their sheer bloody-minded stupidity.
-
- Fortunately I have no such moral qualms, and am perfectly ready to
- stick a gun in your back and make you pay up if a real Public Good
- is at stake.
-
- But what I don't see is how art, or literature in specific, is
- such a good. After all, to my stubbornly myopic view of things,
- it seems that restricting the reading of books to those who pay
- for them is perfectly good disqualification from this exalted
- status.
-
- Because let's not forget what we're doing when we subsidize
- literature. I might be able to support it but I will brook no
- euphemisms in the process. What we are doing is forcing people to
- buy books that they do not want to read; and before you do this
- you had better have a pretty damn good reason.
-
- Right?
-
- c
-