Will probably beat everyone elses picks.
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No, that is a critical part of the equation as well.
They must produce profit while abiding by the laws they operate under.
Mostly the government (specially ours) regulates against the common good.
The common good is to produce as many goods and services as possible (think operations and medical equipment, housing and transport) and make sure they are distributed fairly (note I did not say equally).
We need a massive abundance of everything.
Capitalism is incredibly efficient at producing goods and services, but unregulated capitalism is crap at ensuring an equitable distribution of the goods and services produced. Unregulated capitalism inevitably produces and exacerbates inequality and everyone (not only those on the bottom) loses out.
For me, the issue is not whether capitalism should be regulated, but rahter how and how much.
Thanks SailorRob. My post was as a result of countless hours watching Milton Friedman videos on youtube haha. I get my political views from libertarian sources like ReasonTV and John Stossel videos, where as I get my views on investing from videos of shareholder meetings from Berkshire Hathaway, reading the intelligent investor, and reading various sources online. I don't agree with Warren Buffetts view on taxation and the role of government, but he is a legendary investor that I admire.
What are your views on the role of government and taxation?
Remember Mungers wise words, he tells young people to avoid intense ideology. Why?There’s a limit to how much you can truly understand vicariously, even for those who really try.
Life experience punches you in the face in a way that reading biographies does not.You don’t know enough about the world at 25 or 30 to be sure of anything let alone 18.
Pick your absolutist political position and as the years go by you’ll see examples and edge cases where absolutism does not work.If you tie your identity to a political philosophy too early, when you’re punched in the face you’ll rationalize it rather than learn from it.
I’m not mentioning any specific political positions but most of the absolutist positions on hot button issues do not survive being punched in the face.
The role of government should be limited to upholding the rights of individuals such as private property, free speech, liberty ect. Taxation should be limited to ensuring these rights are upheld. I'm not the type to call taxation "theft" rather than a necessary evil.
Warren Buffett doesn't believe the rich are taxed enough in the US, despite the top 1% paying 42.3% of income taxes in 2020. I believe that the wealthy in aggregate pay more than their fair share. That isn't to say there aren't cases where rich people are able to work the tax system to their favour, and pay an amount which is unfair to the rest of society. The tax rules should be simplified as much as possible to avoid this happening.
I don't believe I'm absolutist in my views about much, rather I attempt to examine arguments by their merit. I agree it is something to be mindful at all times however, since people are subject to cognitive biases and falling for logical fallacies.