It’s A Jetsons World

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Audiobook

Product Author
Jeffrey A. Tucker
Publisher
Laissez Faire Books
Publication Date
2012
Item Number
401SA0901

eBook

Product Author
Jeffrey A. Tucker
ISBN-13
978-1621290339
Publisher
Laissez Faire Books
Publication Date
2012
Item Number
401SE0904

Paperback

Product Author
Jeffrey A. Tucker
ISBN-13
978-1621290681
Publisher
Laissez Faire Books
Publication Date
2013
Item Number
401SP0930

Description:

We are surrounded by miracles created in the private sector, particularly in the digital universe, and yet we don’t appreciate them enough. Meanwhile, the public sector is systematically wrecking the physical world in sneaky and petty ways that really do matter.

Jeffrey Tucker, in this follow-up to his Bourbon for Breakfast, draws detailed attention to both. He points out that the products of digital capitalism are amazing, astounding, beyond belief more outrageously advanced than anything the makers of the Jetsons could even imagine. With this tiny box in hand, we can do a real-time video chat with anyone on the planet and pay nothing more than my usual service fee. This means that anyone on the planet can do business with and be friends with any other person on the globe. The borders, the limits, the barriers they are all being blasted away.

The pace of change is mind-boggling. The world is being reinvented in our lifetimes, every day. Email has only been mainstream for 15 years or so, and young people now regard it as a dated form of communication used only for the most formal correspondence. Today young people are brief instant messaging through social media, but that s only for now, and who knows what next year will bring.

Oddly, hardly anyone seems to care, and even fewer care about the institutional force that makes all this possible, which is the market economy. Instead, we just adjust to the new reality. We even hear of the grave problem of miracle fatigue too much great stuff, too often. Truly, this new world seems to have arrived without much fanfare at all.

And why? It has something to do with the nature of the human mind, Tucker argues, which does not and will not change so long as we live in a world of scarcity. We adjust to amazing things and don t think much about their source or the system that produces them.

The Jetsons world is our world: explosive technological advances, entrenched bourgeois culture, a culture of enterprise that is the very font of the good life. But there is one major difference, and it isn t the flying car, which we might already have were it not for the government s promotion of roads and the central plan that manages transportation. It is this: we also live in the midst of a gigantic leviathan state that seeks to control every aspect of our life to its smallest detail.

The government is still Flintstones, an anachronism that operates as this massive drag on our lives. With its money manipulations, regulations, taxation, wars (on people, products, and services), prisons, and injustices, we similarly look the other way. We try to find the workaround and keep living like the Jetsons. Often times things don t go right and the reason is the anachronism that rules us. And yet, unless we understand cause and effect in the way that the old liberal tradition explained it, we can miss the source.

Tucker goes to great length to explain that which we take for granted, that glorious global network of cooperation and exchange we call the market economy and its capacity to meet our every material need. At the same time, he draws attention to way that the government is chipping away at economic opportunity and making our lives a bit more miserable every day. The answer to the problem of private miracles and public crimes is to keep the former and jettison the later — all in the service of that elusive dream of universal peace and prosperity.

This book will inspire love for free markets – and loathing of government.

5.00 out of 5

2 reviews for It’s A Jetsons World

  1. 5 out of 5

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  2. 5 out of 5

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    I am so pleased to present to you the MP3 audio version of It’s a Jetsons World: Private Miracles and Public Crimes, published in book form in 2011. As the author, I am pleased that Stefan Molyneux agreed to be the reader of the book. He brings to the text just the right amount of drama. In some ways, in my own estimation, he makes the book seem even better than it is. That’s what every great reader should do.

    Let me provide some background.

    It must have been about 1997 when a co-worker told me that the development of the digital economy had barely begun and amazing things were coming our way. As crazy as it sounds today, I was a skeptic. History is full of claims that such and such were going to change everything and reinvent the world. I knew enough about such nonsense not to believe it this time. Then came the dot-com bust of 2000 that seemed to confirm all my biases. I reveled in a sense of having been right. The liquidation occurred and life went on as usual.

    To be sure, during these years, another part of me was taking advantage of the new technologies. I was putting texts online. I was using the Web more than ever. I built blogs and forums in several different sectors. The more I worked in this area, the more I could see results. Putting together these two halves of my brain took some time, but by 2004 or so, I went through a conversion. I had been wrong to be a skeptic. We were, in fact, dealing with miracles. The dot-com bust happened not because the technology was bogus, but because the Fed’s funny money tends to gravitate toward fashionable sectors.

    My eyes opened. Social media began. The Web’s growth accelerated. The smartphone was invented. The video phone, a dream of my childhood, came into its own. The world was being connected in ways that would have been unthinkable. It was like a new Enlightenment. I began to see and live it every day. My purpose in writing this book was to mark the moment, to draw attention to what was happening and why. I sought to explain the events to myself and to anyone else who would listen, knowing full well that the text would date itself rapidly.

    Yet reading through it now, I’m pleased that it didn’t age as quickly as I feared. The core message is not something I’m seeing elsewhere these days. The technologies still need explaining. The forces that have given rise to them need explaining too. We also need to realize that the digital age has not changed anything about the relationship between power and liberty. Liberty has created beautiful things in the digital age. Power continues its nefarious work. Both are chronicled in this book.

    My message: Let’s cling to eternal verities even as we prepare for the wild digital ride now and in the years to come. Technology changes — and thank goodness — but truth does not.

    Sincerely,
    Jeffrey Tucker

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5.00 out of 5

1 review for It’s A Jetsons World

  1. 5 out of 5

    :

    5 Stars for being TOO much fun.

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