This thread took on a surreal tone when Moore was blasted for (a) dragging the war into a health-care debate and (b) attacking CNN "journalists" for being paid by corporations. ("So what? Moore's paid by a corporation too.")
The war is the 800-lb. gorilla in every room where any kind of social benefit program is discussed. That's because you can't have guns and butter, as the U.S. is finding out. You can't fund a $12 billion a month war AND blaze new trails in public health and welfare. And there's no free lunch.
And I guess any thinking person over the age of 12 realized that the corporations which pay the CNN "journalists" are, indirectly, Big Pharma, with a vested interest in keeping government out of any kind of health care, and the corporations which pay Moore are media corporations NOT dependent on Big Pharma to any appreciable extent, which can make money by promoting left-wing OR right-wing POVs and thus have no economic axe to grind, although I would venture to say that most Hollywood movies that I have seen tend towards the right of centre, with a few notable exceptions. They won't risk pissing off the heartland on Motherhood, the Flag or Apple Pie.
CNN came out swinging in their attack on Moore, and then his web-site nailed them in all their broadcast lies, so they HAD to go back on to defend their (now non-existent) reputation. I caught some of it last night on Larry King Live, Michael against Sanjay Gupta and Blitzer, two "journalists" whose ethics belong in a whorehouse rather than a newsroom. A lot going on here, so I only had a few minutes watching time, but the few minutes I saw were truly comical, Gupta seemingly back-pedalling furiously from any attack on Moore and King trying to cut Michael off, mostly unsuccessfully, every time he was scoring a point, which is to say every time he opened his mouth.
The Stossel piece was interesting. I guess the one thing you can say for him is that he's not a whore like the others who attack Moore with bogus "facts" (i.e., lies) but he's a throwback. He's pushing a philosophy which has no relevance in the complex society we live in today where issues of industrial production impact directly on health issues, as does foreign policy.
<<But why would a philosophy that was good enough to build a successful society be unsuited to sustaining that society? >>
Because society changes over time?
<<Individual freedom, with minimal government, made it possible for masses of people to cooperate for mutual advantage. As a result, society could be rich and peaceful. >>
It was NEVER very peaceful. Not in the U.S.A.
<<As the great economist Ludwig von Mises wrote, "What makes friendly relations between human beings possible is the higher productivity of the division of labor. . . . A preeminent common interest, the preservation and further intensification of social cooperation, becomes paramount and obliterates all essential collisions.">>
And what happens when population AND productivity grow to the point where there are a whole bunch of people whose labour isn't really necessary for anything?