Niall Ferguson | The Utopian Myth of Equality |

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  • čas přidán 17. 04. 2022
  • In this historic short, Niall Ferguson dismantles the secular left's obsession with the notion of equality. He shows why the idea of absolute equality is both impossible to define and impossible to achieve.
    Ferguson also identifies western civilisation's (if it still exists) major adversaries: Radical Islam, Communist China and cultural self-loathing.
    You can find the full conversation here: • Cold War II, Climate C...
    #Equality #Communism #Freedom #Liberty
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Conversations feature John Anderson, former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia, interviewing the world's foremost thought leaders about today's pressing social, cultural and political issues.
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Komentáře • 364

  • @buddyjenkins7188
    @buddyjenkins7188 Před 2 lety +303

    I am a science teacher in high school and I was have a discussion on equality with one of our English teachers. He sayid we should have equal outcomes in society. I asked him if all of his students made the same grade. Of course not he said, they don't all put forth the same effort. He did not see the connection.

    • @reginaford8575
      @reginaford8575 Před 2 lety

      So sad he did not see the correlation! Hopefully one night he will have an epiphany

    • @pauljohnson6233
      @pauljohnson6233 Před 2 lety +7

      Myopia

    • @felawes
      @felawes Před 2 lety +19

      That's why he was self-selected by his intellect to be an English teacher. We all have our limitations.

    • @ardvarq9027
      @ardvarq9027 Před 2 lety

      Marxists would never argue for equality of outcome. They argue for control of the means of production.

    • @MobiusMinded
      @MobiusMinded Před 2 lety

      Most teachers have no business teaching. They’re worse than boat anchors and the statistics prove it.

  • @jburma
    @jburma Před 2 lety +56

    0:25 Rather than trying for equality of outcomes it's "better to focus on freedom and you'll get reasonable degrees of equality of opportunity." Exactly.

    • @johnfisher247
      @johnfisher247 Před 2 lety +2

      No freedom is never permission to do anything and whatever is immoral. Rev Martin Luther Kings says in his letter ftom Birmingham Jail an immoral law is no law at all.

    • @aaabaaab3945
      @aaabaaab3945 Před 2 lety

      Until criminal politicians in Washington DC have to adhere to the same laws as us peasants- there is no equality.
      Prove me wrong.

    • @jburma
      @jburma Před 2 lety +1

      @@aaabaaab3945 So we should allow the criminal politicians to legislate equality of outcomes? How does that work? Your point is not an argument that equality of outcome is a more favorable condition.

  • @douglashouston81
    @douglashouston81 Před 2 lety +25

    Our battle is not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers

  • @Papa1Smurf1
    @Papa1Smurf1 Před 2 lety +115

    One wonders how much this generation would have achieved if they were as preoccupied with their own achievement and ability as they are with everyone else’s.

    • @justinw2232
      @justinw2232 Před 2 lety +8

      Envy is a curse

    • @bretttheroux8040
      @bretttheroux8040 Před 2 lety +2

      Brilliantly stated

    • @paulrevere2379
      @paulrevere2379 Před 2 lety +4

      There are three 'E's that are a problem in varied proportions. Together they are pathologically synergistic.
      These three are
      Ego
      Envy and
      Entitlement Mentality
      Each of these has been touched on already in this short thread before my comment. I don't think it is just pure coincidence that these specific things would become evident to critical thinkers pondering the broader topic.
      The much tougher thing of course is what should people do with regard to these problems upon realization how much of a threat to civilization they actually pose.

    • @Papa1Smurf1
      @Papa1Smurf1 Před 2 lety

      @@paulrevere2379 and where did you copy and paste that from, mate? 🙄

    • @paulrevere2379
      @paulrevere2379 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Papa1Smurf1 Not your standard compliment, but I will accept it with a word of encouragement.
      I began to identify these issues years ago. I did not coin the term Entitlement Mentality but it accurately describes the newest of the three issues.
      So far as I know, I am the only one who frequently includes them together.
      I am also involved in resisting various broader social pathologies, those things that bring down civilization at the level of large group dynamics in contrast to these which are at the personal level.
      There is no similar mnemonic that I know of for those bigger (numerically, not qualitatively) society/government dynamics, but I wish there were. If I discover such a thing by someone better at words than I am then I hope I will not be negligent to give them credit.
      For me, I am not looking for any. I simply wish for people to be more mindful of virtue and all that goes with it. Standing up for things virtuous is an even better position to take in our present age when most virtuous things are under attack.

  • @fjm1235
    @fjm1235 Před 2 lety +36

    All people should be treated equally under or before the law. However, in life, there's no such thing as equality. Some people are more capable and/or ambitious than others. You can't legislate that away; it's a fact of life as old as mankind.

  • @lourada2249
    @lourada2249 Před 2 lety +35

    isn't it great to see a very sensible, informative, and 'no nonsense' conversation by 2 good thinkers.

    • @carstenschmidt9159
      @carstenschmidt9159 Před 2 lety

      you call these two good thinkers? you might want to think about that (if you can)

    • @timothypye901
      @timothypye901 Před 3 měsíci

      Good thinker? Isn't Anderson just a former deputy PM of Australia with a CZcams channel?

  • @azmike3572
    @azmike3572 Před 2 lety +38

    Thomas Sowell also has some excellent interviews about this same subject.

    • @maambomumba6123
      @maambomumba6123 Před 2 lety +3

      He sure does. Come to think of it Sowell has excellent interviews about a lot of subjects. The mans work is impeccable.

  • @sharonalbanese8084
    @sharonalbanese8084 Před 2 lety +17

    What a truly briliant conversation by two men of incredible intellect . Thank you.

  • @mikehunt.1609
    @mikehunt.1609 Před 2 lety +5

    The major problem in our society is aspirational people who don't have the abilities to fulfill their personal aspersions, their the ones who are really dangerous, they are unable to accept their limitations and project their disappoint on to the world by demanding it's destruction.

    • @jefflawrence5835
      @jefflawrence5835 Před 2 lety +1

      Or is it possible that they see the cards are stacked against them and no matter what effort they put fourth they will always be working to line the pockets of the grotesquely rich. Y’all don’t want a socialist state, then pay folks an ethical and dignified wage and history’s little experiment won’t have to repeat itself.

    • @mikehunt.1609
      @mikehunt.1609 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jefflawrence5835 I quite agree that a lot of people in our society have the cards stacked against them, but they are rarely the people screaming about the inequalities in life, the section of society I'm talking about are those who get a lot of the breaks, such as being born into moderately well off families and get to go to higher education and then complain about it all!

    • @stud6414
      @stud6414 Před 2 lety

      The spiteful mutants

  • @bigred8438
    @bigred8438 Před 2 lety +40

    Yes, it is a classic sad point of reality that no matter what situation you are born into, or aspire to and may or may not reach, there will always be people better off above and below you on the "equality" pyramid. What can you do, except to recognize this very puzzling conundrum and live a modest material existence, remain a small target for those poverty stricken wretches searching for someone to scold, remain materially anonymous, so people above you will ignore you and people below you materially will not notice you.

    • @aa2220
      @aa2220 Před 2 lety

      Says the Aryans who spread a virus and used its impact on the Americas to dominate. A new world is born boy, and you will know your place in it barbarian!

    • @kelvengaskill8157
      @kelvengaskill8157 Před 2 lety

      Depressingly true. Skulking mediocrity in keeping one's head below the parapet and not being ostentatious or having gratuitous displays of wealth and especially silent of contra popular opinions to the woke narrative.

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 Před 2 lety

      Thats largely why they say people over thirty really don't get involved in political activity. You look at something like climate change and most of those people are young people, in particular young women. This article doesn't seem like a rationale to placate YOU, but to keep you and I from joining women, minorities, or other groups who are TRYING to even the playing field by rejecting them and sayign "what you ask is not possible". Because of course part of that 'white privelege' is the assumption that equality of some measure exists and we benefit from it, and the rest shouldn't expect it. For US we already largely have that. So again, a cop pulls me over for a vehicle infraction, I don't have MUCH fear I'm going to end up dead-unless I lose and start screaming or something. But thats exactly what Black Lives Matter is fighting for, they are saying "when we get stopped by a cop we shouldn't be a afraid for our lives". Which is a pretty reasonable measure of equality. Two weeks ago an african student was killed, and the bodycam 'not available'.
      So to lots of people this is NOT 'hypothetical'. You dont really give any examples, I don't know if you mean that "we don't all get to be millionaires but we don't all get to be bums", which is true but I don't think the biggest issue with equality.

    • @dawnemile4974
      @dawnemile4974 Před 2 lety +2

      Very wise.

    • @bigred8438
      @bigred8438 Před rokem +1

      @DnB and Psy Production Yep that is what I said.

  • @richardglover314
    @richardglover314 Před 2 lety +56

    wow, such an important discussion for the whole of humanity to hear.

    • @matthewasher9819
      @matthewasher9819 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/Mh9I56J3f4Q/video.html Howdy?

    • @rochesterjohnny7555
      @rochesterjohnny7555 Před 2 lety

      Niall is a genius and a very wise man we should be listening to in the US and UK

  • @francismcglynn4169
    @francismcglynn4169 Před 2 lety +17

    When an incompetent politician promises that you will be better off under his leadership and his redistributionist policies and you believe him and vote for him you will find that he is not only incapable of redistibuting but that he is capable of becoming extremely wealthy and making his friends so , as well.

  • @wearethenightparty
    @wearethenightparty Před rokem +6

    Human variation, be it physical, psychological or spiritual, is the spice of life. It’s ironic that those who preach “diversity” want us all to be the same.

  • @tonioinverness
    @tonioinverness Před rokem +3

    This was a good interview. I disagree with most of the points politically, but this is the kind of rational, non-inflammatory discussion that helps advance the conversation.

  • @littletime8849
    @littletime8849 Před rokem +4

    Agree! Living in a "ideological bubble" is not reality.

  • @johnalbert5786
    @johnalbert5786 Před 2 lety +11

    Should be titled “the Myth of Equity “

  • @dawnemile4974
    @dawnemile4974 Před 2 lety +7

    I smile when younger people pontificate about other countries.

  • @555Trout
    @555Trout Před 2 lety +39

    We must dump the term "equality".
    It's fairness , a fair playing field.

    • @buildmotosykletist1987
      @buildmotosykletist1987 Před 2 lety +4

      "A fair go". The Aussie "Fair go".

    • @the_forbinproject2777
      @the_forbinproject2777 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@buildmotosykletist1987 equality of opportunity is expected to have different outcomes from a diverse population - it equity thats the issue- single level outcomes are forces or lied about . all people have different skills and levels - you all cannotcome first in the race .

    • @the_forbinproject2777
      @the_forbinproject2777 Před 2 lety +2

      @Life Is Good people are not born equal , they have inherited traits , some good , some bad. to say my disabled daughter was born equal of an able person is a pi$$ take.
      As for nurture then more able gifted parents can have a benficial effect on their offspring ( assuming they're dealt an even card) .
      responsibility and common sense. are factors of both nature and inheritance.
      you can still be unlucky too

    • @555Trout
      @555Trout Před 2 lety +1

      @@buildmotosykletist1987 I like it.

    • @555Trout
      @555Trout Před 2 lety +1

      @Life Is Good It's just not true. We are not born "equal".

  • @chrisyuri4187
    @chrisyuri4187 Před 2 lety +14

    Norwegian here, we actually have some of the lowest corporate tax rates in the world, our wages make up for high taxation rate on income and sale tax, but that being said is it worth it? That is something that needs to be discussed but if you question the current status quo paradigm you get attacked as a radical.

    • @srisivaraman8063
      @srisivaraman8063 Před 2 lety +2

      Scandinavian countries dont spend much on defence and that's one reason you can spare more cash for oth3er things.

    • @chrisyuri4187
      @chrisyuri4187 Před 2 lety

      @@srisivaraman8063 That is true, and because we are a free society we don't need to spend much on internal security apparatus either so we can invest all this wealth in new business, education and welfare instead (or waste it on climatechange NGO's quotas lol). Maybe this will change with Russia/China alliance?

    • @rosswatson9144
      @rosswatson9144 Před 2 lety

      You have oil money.. changes everything.. doesn't count for the rest of us.

    • @chrisyuri4187
      @chrisyuri4187 Před 2 lety +1

      @@rosswatson9144 Oil only accounts for 10% of State Revenue, it is small businesses that fuel Norway, we are not Venezuela, Qatar or Saudi Arabia, keep coping. We take care of our private economic sector with low corporate taxes. You need to fix you.

    • @zeldaharris6876
      @zeldaharris6876 Před rokem

      Keep questioning - eventually you will sow the seeds of doubt in enough people which will germinate into a force for change. Stay strong - better to be a seen as a 'radical' than not being true to yourself.

  • @richardabbot8724
    @richardabbot8724 Před 2 lety +22

    Equality is the promotion of mediocrity. This idea is already deeply embedded in the West and this conversation feels like it needs to catch up with what has already happened.

    • @terraflow__bryanburdo4547
      @terraflow__bryanburdo4547 Před 2 lety +5

      Equality is possible if you lower the bar enough; the lowest common denominator is serfdom.

    • @adrian_V99
      @adrian_V99 Před 2 lety +1

      It's embedded in the cultural zeitgeist but not, nor will it ever be in the world of business and finance, even in the West. At some point seriousness kicks in.

  • @francisbacon7738
    @francisbacon7738 Před 2 lety +7

    First and foremost it is how you define inequality. I know rich people (in money) who are very unhappy, I know poor people (in a western sense, that is having little money but still having good health care and all the basics met) who are spiritually minded and perfectly happy. Peace of mind is priceless and cannot be paid for in cash.

  • @iangilbert4811
    @iangilbert4811 Před 2 lety +41

    I always enjoy listening to Niall Ferguson - he always provides an eloquent and measured analysis. Good channel Mr. Anderson; keep up the good work!

    • @reginaford8575
      @reginaford8575 Před 2 lety +1

      Matthew 25 gives the best example of equality (the parable of the talents)

    • @yobrant
      @yobrant Před rokem

      What analysis? I heard several assertions but never any analysis.

    • @iangilbert7722
      @iangilbert7722 Před rokem

      @@yobrant I can’t help you.

    • @frankmaclachlan897
      @frankmaclachlan897 Před 11 měsíci

      @@reginaford8575😊😅😮😢🎉😂❤

  • @MoranM
    @MoranM Před 2 lety +19

    It doesn't take much reflection to see that even 'equality of opportunity' is an unachievable myth.
    The best any society can aim for is for (nearly) everyone to have 'an' opportunity. For some people, their opportunity is much more likely to lead to a positive outcome than others. That's inevitable.

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 Před 2 lety

      Since it has never existed anywhere, but is achieved in other countries much better, then obviously the sensible thing to do is copy the policies of the countries which do it better. But thats really not done. If you admit that it exists AT ALL, then I don't see why its an unachievable myth. There is very little 'inevitibility' in societies UNLESS you predetermine the conditions. Set up a horrible society, then yes, you can say utopia is a myth. Meanwhile, not sure how much you travel but lots of places have much more egalitarian outcomes with different policies. But if you refuse to change the policies, you can't expect different outcomes. Granted, MOST of these decisions are not even within the grasp of voters because no parties offer them. Which means we have a society that largely says such things must be impossible because we don't even have the means of trying the polices that COULD lead to better outcomes.

    • @MoranM
      @MoranM Před 2 lety +1

      @@mikearchibald744 You cannot simply copy a policy and expect it to have the same impact elsewhere. We see this with the American model of the free market which does not fit well with Japanese corporation culture, Russian corruption, Mediterranean family structures and so on.
      But that's not really the point here. The point is that whilst no doubt you can reduce inequalities you will never remove them.
      One reason is your measurement system. Operational practices, data capture approaches, sampling methodologies will always mean you measure some difference in outcomes.
      More importantly, heritable traits, cultural transmission, individual attitudes and abilities will inevitably give rise to differences in outcomes. For example, a child of a quantum physicist will have an advantage over the child of a bin man (no disrespect to the latter). Unless (i) you ban the parent helping the child or (ii) educational support is so expert and extensive that additional support from the parent will not add value. The latter is not feasible & the former is horrendously totalitarian.
      I think you simply mean that there are societal models which may lead to lower levels of inequality, and I would not disagree with this.

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 Před 2 lety

      @@MoranM Well, you CAN copy them, the issue is that the devil is in the details. I'm not sure of the details of what you mean by the free market and then list OTHER countries because certainly the US has as much as, if not more corruption than those places, the difference in some cases is simply that the system is further along and so what THEY call corruption WE simply call 'business as usual'. America is certainly run by the same plutocratic families and industries as in other countries, there is no point talking about a russian oligarch and then refusing to call Jeff Bezos , Zuckerburg or the Koch Brothers oligarchs, because thats exaxctly what they are.
      Moreover, thats exactly what almost every capitalist claims, which is that you CAN bring in free markets under all conditions, in fact you NEED to bring them in, otherwise thats admitting that communism is a better scenario.
      I had a much longer comment to another person going into your example about equality of opportunity, one person having a quantum physicist for a father isn't 'necessarily' an advantage, in fact likely isn't one at all if they are working. The bin guy will have more free time. Thats certainly not the issue with 'equality', and is why equality of OUTCOME is more important.
      Its why there was affirmative action programs, because there was such a tipped scale that in order to get equal of OUTCOME you had to make the system itself unequal. That was ruled not discriminatory because of the latent or overt discrmination already pre existing.
      But there isn't much point in talking about the equality which means a teacher spends more time with a student having trouble than with the student who already knows it. In the past its been well known that gifted students got MORE teacher attention, which is discrimination. So a policy of letting the gifted kid get on with it themselves and helping the other, is a form of discrimination, its just a different form than from before, and a better one since it leads to equality of outcome, which is all students haveing a decent education.

    • @imperfectious
      @imperfectious Před rokem +1

      Change out 'equality of opportunity' for 'freedom from conscious impediments' within a framework that insists upon adherence to the non-aggression principle.

    • @rainydays8248
      @rainydays8248 Před rokem

      Having equal opportunity is known as equity, aspiring for equal outcome is known as equality. Equity is a good aspiration for a healthy, progressive society, equality is not.

  • @blackbaron0
    @blackbaron0 Před 2 lety +18

    Equality ultimately means everyone is the same.
    We are not, and neither should we be.
    By being different gives different points of view. It is up to the decision makers to decide what is best, and when. If they get it wrong, and they will from time to time, that then helps inform the next decisions.
    It's a messy way of doing things, and may make decisions slower in the short term. We have seen with authoritarian regimes that when they get it wrong it goes horribly wrong. And woe betide anyone for disagreeing with the policy.
    I can understand equality under the law, though that is probably a myth also. There should be inclusivity as everyone can contribute.
    Some places and people will not agree with that. As we have found when the West has tried to impose its values on other countries, it often does not go well !

  • @francismcglynn4169
    @francismcglynn4169 Před 2 lety +6

    Muggeridge was intrigued by socialism when he was younger and actually went to Russia to see for himself. Unlike some, he was not shown what the Government wanted him to see but saw what the reality was for himself.

  • @TheWorldofMomus
    @TheWorldofMomus Před 2 lety +3

    He is right about everything in this clip. Our self hating is the biggest threat.

  • @geoffreybrockmeier3765
    @geoffreybrockmeier3765 Před 2 lety +7

    Humans can either be free or equal. Not both. If they are free, they will not be equal. And equality can only come by force.

    • @motameus1
      @motameus1 Před 2 lety

      Why can't I be free yet still view other people as my equal (in the sense that we are all human beings worthy of respect)?

  • @tomasina10
    @tomasina10 Před 2 lety +10

    How exactly would one assure “fairness “ In ALL things ? It is the nature of life to have different circumstances. Only thorough complete force is it possible to keep people at the same “level “ and then who exactly is in charge of checking that ? Whoever is in charge is then “ahead” of everyone .

    • @edwardst-pierre1020
      @edwardst-pierre1020 Před 2 lety +1

      With this talk of diversity and inclusion which are exactly the opposite how can anyone achieve equality. But the terms inclusion means to exclude the majority of people so how is that inclusive and equal.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      > How exactly would one assure “fairness “ In ALL things
      Leftists will keep trying until everyone is dead.

  • @TeaParty1776
    @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety +3

    To people terrified by independent judgment, equality is a good place to temporarily hide. But, as Rand said, man's life requires accepting the risk of knowledge.

  • @AndrewMartinNZ
    @AndrewMartinNZ Před 2 lety +7

    Vote for a politician that redistributes wealth and you'll end up with a poor population and rich politicians.

  • @markhamburger5587
    @markhamburger5587 Před 2 lety +19

    The main problem of the West is the disconnection of our educational system from real life. Teachers and professors who just teach without having any connection or responsibilities in our communities remain in the realm of abstraction. A person who never has had any entrepreneurial experience, has never had the reality of being a soldier, a fireman, a policeman, an ER medic and has no other friends other than academics, will most likely lose traction with society's needs, worries and real preoccupations.
    Ideologies are usually born at universities and then passed down to rest of the educational system, journalism and politics. Equality (of outcome) is the predominant idea behind all the socialist attempts in recent decades and still lingers on in our temples of learning.

    • @JRobbySh
      @JRobbySh Před 2 lety

      History tells us that modern science, which is the well-spring of modern technology, arose out of competition with Islam. That competition was intensified by a competition between the nations during the age of exploration which brought the western hemisphere within the Western orbit, and a successful competition in the Indo-Pacific region. Portugal, Spain, France, England, the Dutch Netherlands all achieved world wide empires that lasted until the Catastrophe of the 20th century. Islam contributed nothing to this.

    • @bicycleutopia
      @bicycleutopia Před 2 lety

      no. wrong. where do you get these ideas??

    • @markhamburger5587
      @markhamburger5587 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bicycleutopia "no. wrong. where do you get these ideas??" Really? What kind of argument is that? Are you just negating what people are writing?

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      Abstracting (selective focusing) from the evidence of the senses is mans basic method of survival. Man is not a brute animal, dependent only on the concrete knowledge of here and now. And common sense is good only for small things. It cant solve complex problems. Abstraction is a learned skill, made much easier and quicker with a teacher. Education is not job training or social adjustment.
      Comprachicos-Ayn Rand
      Teaching Johnny To Think-Leonard Peikoff

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      @@JRobbySh Modern science is the product of Aristotle's discovery of scientific method applied by post-Renaissance thinkers as systematic induction ,measurement, and experiment by Francis Bacon, Newton, etc.
      Leap of Logic-David Harriman

  • @dartharpy9404
    @dartharpy9404 Před 2 lety +1

    great conversation 👌

  • @jasonbourne4865
    @jasonbourne4865 Před rokem +2

    As with most things, a balanced approach seems the most appropriate. Radical ideas (and solutions) seldom produce positive outcomes.

  • @michaelscholes8956
    @michaelscholes8956 Před rokem

    The link to the full conversation in the description links to a different conversation. Would love to see the full conversation from whence this was taken. Does anybody have the proper link?

  • @deplorablecovfefe9489
    @deplorablecovfefe9489 Před rokem +1

    The inequality I suffer under is my parents were able to buy cheap, undeveloped lake lot property and build a dream vacation home over the years. I don't have that option. There's no properties left today... so I would have to do 20 times better to do just as well...

  • @jamespercy8506
    @jamespercy8506 Před 2 lety +1

    the truly blessed world that never has to consider consequences, inconvenient and unintended

  • @athinaantoniadou1050
    @athinaantoniadou1050 Před 2 lety +3

    Just call the real enemy by name.... Or else..... We are done.

  • @drstrangelove4998
    @drstrangelove4998 Před 2 lety

    Just bought Neill‘s book Empire, v much looking forward to it.

    • @barrazoot1777
      @barrazoot1777 Před 2 lety

      It’s a very good read. Required reading for those demanding reparations.

  • @tombristowe846
    @tombristowe846 Před 2 lety

    I'd like to know when this conversation was held. It was uploaded on April 19th I see, but as Ukraine was not mentioned it must be older.

  • @FinnGriffin
    @FinnGriffin Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome commentary from the best: Niall Ferguson

  • @walfredswanson
    @walfredswanson Před 2 lety +3

    However "equal" people may appear internally, the entire notion of "equality" is turned on its head when external conditions and events are taken into account: political, social, economic and cultural events vary across time and from one geographic area to another; physical conditions - including appearances beyond race - affect both perceptions and genuine abilities. Even the notion of equal opportunity cannot be perfectly achieved. Yes, we must try to be as fair and equitable as possible, but sometimes, pure luck or chance intervene despite individual effort. Learning to cope with life is an important skill.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      What would have been the benefit of the opportunity of a state-subsidized music education to Bill Gates? He wanted computers. Always ask, opportunity to whom and for what?

  • @joevolcano6720
    @joevolcano6720 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Equal opportunity is incredibly deceiving, no one has an equal chance of all opportunity. This notion is a lie.

  • @Samsgarden
    @Samsgarden Před 2 lety +2

    Problem is, society is so complex that on one hand, there's an incredible pressure to correct all gender and racial disparities while simultaneously, the degree of crony capitalism and extreme wealth inequality is increasing

  • @lloydjones3371
    @lloydjones3371 Před 2 lety +2

    The Scandinavian countries do have high taxes, but one should keep in mind that all citizens pay high taxes, and therefore the tax systems in these countries are probably more regressive than the United States, where low-income individuals typically pay no taxes.

  • @williamreymond2669
    @williamreymond2669 Před 2 lety +11

    0:35 Niall "We know more and more from the people who work on human genetics that ability is not equally allocated." True, very true, it has always been true. Therefore, if you want a world that is humane, you need to devise a system that can humanely accommodate a very broad range of human abilities, not just the smartest.

    • @deniseforsythe8965
      @deniseforsythe8965 Před 2 lety +1

      How do you define “humane?”

    • @charlesdevilliers5387
      @charlesdevilliers5387 Před 2 lety

      Your point being?

    • @ardvarq9027
      @ardvarq9027 Před 2 lety

      Talking about 'genetics' sounds so pompous. I enjoy Ferguson's writing, but his understanding of science is shaky. Putting too much faith in certain branches of science such as genomics is simply superstitious and ideological.

    • @williamreymond2669
      @williamreymond2669 Před rokem

      @@deniseforsythe8965 How about: possessing moral and intellectual advancement enough to be motivated by concern with the alleviation of the suffering of others.

    • @williamreymond2669
      @williamreymond2669 Před rokem

      @@charlesdevilliers5387 Point being, for instance, an economic policy that seeks to export to the lowest wage country possible all of the jobs that American's of modest intellectual ability my be able to support themselves and their families, might not be a humane economic policy for anyone involved in the transaction - including the low wage workers over seas.

  • @melchized3294
    @melchized3294 Před 2 lety +1

    In the 1980s we had a head of state who practiced equality of outcome ethos. Prices of items were made the same across the country. Many of the elite and the rich in the country were either shot to death or were imprisoned (let the blood flow, the youth would cry out). High achieving individuals fled the country.
    At the end of his 19 years reign, poverty and hardship were the equality of outcome he delivered. And oh, he, his friends, family and the people he ruled the country with became very rich.

  • @chappo4845
    @chappo4845 Před 2 lety +1

    The constant focus on an unachievable equality of outcome only prevents equality of opportunity from ever being achieved.

  • @youbigtubership
    @youbigtubership Před rokem +1

    Child 1: "I'm stronger than you are, nerny nerny noo."
    Child 2: "Then you can help me carry all the lollies they gave me to equalize us."
    Child 1:"Only if you pay me half your lollies."
    Child 2: "But then we won't be equal anymore."
    Observer: "Aye, there's the rub."

  • @donaldreed2351
    @donaldreed2351 Před rokem +1

    "Equality of outcome" is finally found only in the graveyard.

  • @alexgreer7700
    @alexgreer7700 Před 2 lety +2

    Socialism, equality etc is essentially a religion. It has its prophets and priests, its holy writ, its “true church” in the form of political parties, and its vision of a heaven on earth 🌍!

    • @ronnieince4568
      @ronnieince4568 Před 2 lety

      Alex Greer -is socialism is a religion -a religion of envy preached by the gospel of despair and worshipped by the less successful in any society .Do you want a heart surgeon selected on the basis of equality or one selected on the basis of medical competence !!! Equality if opportunity is not the same as equality of outcome -intelligence is inherited -and not equally inherited.

  • @EmergingEvents
    @EmergingEvents Před 2 lety +7

    Part of the challenge from within is the regulatory environment that continues to grow. As Hayek opined in a television interview “there is no better way to enslave a people than to enmesh them in a fine set of regulations”.

    • @tedmom3029
      @tedmom3029 Před 2 lety +1

      And yet a lack of regulation has led to polluted rivers, land, sky … of misuse and abuse. A middle way is needed.

  • @charleswood3705
    @charleswood3705 Před rokem

    If we are equal we are not free. If we are free we are not equal.

  • @rogeralsop3479
    @rogeralsop3479 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent men.

  • @StephenEntropy
    @StephenEntropy Před 2 lety

    The link to the full conversation is wrong.

  • @matthewrobinson6986
    @matthewrobinson6986 Před 2 lety

    One thing that is not explored here but,is important is why redistribution seems to work pretty well in Sweden but didn’t work in the UK in the 1970s. There are subtleties here. Sweden actually taxes the great bulk of people - those who earn amounts close to the median income very highly and this is used to provide services accessible free of charge or at low cost to all. They don’t tax those who very wealthy very highly - no inheritance tax, low capital gains taxes.

  • @kynchan3332
    @kynchan3332 Před 2 lety

    The lessons were not learnt about accountability. No bailing out of banks, no bailing out big businesses, no illegal wars, if there is not enough money to fund programs cut them. Few things should be free.

  • @morgo5000
    @morgo5000 Před 2 lety +1

    Outstanding

  • @nolagibson4569
    @nolagibson4569 Před rokem

    We are not the same. We are not supposed to be the same.

  • @isabellaliu8409
    @isabellaliu8409 Před 2 lety +3

    If one day the earth planet is run by AI where all jobs for humans will be replaced by AI, ppl have to survive by universal income from the government, perhaps that’s the era of equalising opportunities and equalising outcomes too. But for now I agreed with equalising opportunities but hard to guarantee equalising outcomes, I think the society would be lack of dynamic and creativity.

  • @_DarkEmperor
    @_DarkEmperor Před 2 lety

    Taxation is always coercive.
    Since taxation is unfortunately necessary, taxation should be minimized.

  • @kgsfitness7806
    @kgsfitness7806 Před 2 lety +3

    thank you for this video. i must admit that, even though i am almost 50 years old, i am not well versed in the history of economics...so i myself am one to feel inclined to support massive redistribution of wealth policies. I would love for you to make a video explaining in detail why, as Dr. Ferguson stated, redistribution through heavy taxation policies do not in fact make a society better. It is so strange to me that the idea that massive taxation on the rich to be redistributed via social programs to help everyone have a chance to live better lives could be a bad thing.
    And when you take into account what Dr. Ferguson points out - that talent, aptitude, and abilities etc. are not equally distributed at birth or even the result of the person who possesses these assets hard work - it seems even more appropriate to put massive tax requirements on people who hit somewhat of a genetic lottery and are therefore able to get jobs that make over $500k a year to level the playing field...rather than simply allowing them to use their natural-born abilities to earn enough money to buy a new $2 million 10,000 sq ft because their old 7,000 sq foot home wasn't big enough for their massive 3 person family...or for them to take their kids to Disney for the 5th time that year.

    • @senglomein5766
      @senglomein5766 Před 2 lety

      So in other words: penalize those who are born with above average traits?? Discrimination on the basis of genes, in an attempt to make everyone just average?
      Oh that sounds like a wonderful idea

    • @kgsfitness7806
      @kgsfitness7806 Před 2 lety

      @@senglomein5766 hello. So if by “penalize” you mean creating tax laws that prohibit some people from using their disproportionate amount of income to live like kings due to - as Dr. Ferguson stated - unearned and therefore unmerited abilities and advantages - while the rest of the people less fortunate have to struggle to figure out how to feed their families….then…yes…”penalizing” them seems like it could make society better…granted it would be at the expense of limiting rich people to only owning 3 homes big enough for 5 families instead of 10 and limiting them to only one $100k car instead of 5. I’m not sure how they will make it but hopefully they will be able to take advantage of some new social programs to make ends meet.

    • @Mute040404
      @Mute040404 Před rokem

      Where's the intensive to better oneself if you know you'll be given handouts no matter what you do? Why have a job with responsibilities & stress when you know others will demand bigger handouts ?

  • @bwake
    @bwake Před 2 lety

    Redistribution only works in societies with high social cohesion. Unfortunately, experience seems to indicate that redistribution also tends to destroy social cohesion.

  • @annon3173
    @annon3173 Před 2 lety

    These types of discussion need to be informed by the working poor, lone parents and the sick and disabled as well as the elite - of both sexes. Finland has quality free education plus nearly free quality healthcare. I wish all countries shared the same values. I don’t know why these shouldn’t be free along with decent affordable tenured housing for all and childcare where desired. These are the basics of civilised societies. Conflating the provision of these with economic mismanagement is an issue these ideologues are happy to part take in. The welfare(sic), health, education and housing systems are unfit for purpose in english speaking countries - letting those who have never had the misfortune to rely on these systems dominate discussions about their necessity and provision is unconscionable. Having these in place facilitates social mobility as UK showed in 60s and 70s- dismantling economic safeguarding as the neocons did -has led to less social & economic mobility for most. Understanding the complexity of the barriers to economic mobility, plus the
    overburden placed by blunt state sanctioned “solutions wanting a problem” placed on those driven to the margins, through the withholding of the basics, have to be lived with to fully comprehend them- in order to find workable, affordable, pragmatic solutions-that make economic as well as socially cohesive sense plus nurture better functioning, lower crime communities that enable all to contribute rather than many being excluded through bad design

  • @pauldiezel4584
    @pauldiezel4584 Před 2 lety

    Great questions

  • @coachhannah2403
    @coachhannah2403 Před 2 lety

    That title usually means "It might be inconvenient, and WE are equal, so let's just drop the subject."
    How close was I?

  • @BrianJosephMorgan
    @BrianJosephMorgan Před 2 lety +1

    Very interesting.

  • @robwealer5416
    @robwealer5416 Před 2 lety +1

    Don't know any programs that work primarily on equality of outcomes... or policies. Every program or proposed program I've worked in (have worked in a welfare office) was simply to keep people, barely, out of destitution. No one simply passed through people to high incomes who did not meet requirements or educational standing or ability. All the employment programs were entry level positions after which people were expected to make their own way. So this is a bit of a false flag. It's obvious at the street level that radical approaches would fail to even get out of the gate and be obvious failures, visible for miles to anyone with a working set of eyes.

  • @solitarianihilista1454

    Out of the crooked timber of humanity nothing straight can be made.

  • @jeffreyrichard2575
    @jeffreyrichard2575 Před 2 lety +2

    there is no such thing as " equality of opportunity". Each of us are in a unique place in space and time. Nobody is born with the same opportunities or abilities. The environmental factors are equally unique even among siblings.
    So saying that equality of opportunity is a goal everyone can agree with is not only naively stupid but inherently unobtainable. Same with equality of outcome. No matter what you do, nobody will end up with exactly the same results.
    In fact, the world would be a much better place if we banned the word equality from the language as it does not exist in the real world. People get so upset because we are not equal when that will never be reality has caused untold misery in the world. Racial and cultural disparity hustlers prey upon the stupidity and jealousy of people to manipulate them into the politics of envy. This is what caused the Russian and French revolutions which caused massive death and suffering and the rise of oppressive regimes that continuously sought to root out enemies until everyone was under suspicion and oppressed. We are approaching that in western civilization with disparity politics, group grievances and reparations for alleged crimes committed over a century ago.

  • @timothypye901
    @timothypye901 Před 3 měsíci

    No one advocating ameliorative social equality policies ever suggested all humans are equal did they?

  • @rochesterjohnny7555
    @rochesterjohnny7555 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow Niall Ferguson terrific

  • @APHGRA
    @APHGRA Před 2 lety +1

    Nothing wrong with Finland! We are happy with free education and (almost) free health care and we do not mind paying slightly more tax for this kind of added equality! We usually top the World Happiness table😀

    • @annon3173
      @annon3173 Před 2 lety

      I wish all countries shared the same values. I don’t know why these shouldn’t be free along with decent affordable tenured housing for all and childcare where desired. These are the basics. Conflating the provision of these with economic mismanagement is an issue these ideologues are happy to partake in.

    • @nicks40
      @nicks40 Před 2 lety

      @@annon3173 The problem is that if the State provides 'free' education and 'free' healthcare and 'free' housing and 'free' childcare, then at any point the State can say 'no' to any one it takes a dislike to, for any reason or no reason. You are setting up an inequality between the provider (the State) and the providee (you and me). We saw this in Britain in the '60's and '70's where taxation reached 98% for some people. Or in Sweden where it reached 120%.

  • @imnotanalien7839
    @imnotanalien7839 Před 2 lety

    Who treats their children equally? Exactly! There is no equality.. Set up laws and have thousands of lawyers (US)…. that’s the best you can do….

  • @adrian_V99
    @adrian_V99 Před 2 lety +3

    Yet Scandinavian nations have a higher quality of life. Capitalism run amok can be equally as corrupt as overpowering governments. The UK and north America are too culturally diverse and divisive for social- democracy to take root and fluorish.

    • @Irishhound
      @Irishhound Před rokem +1

      Scandinavian countries are extremely free market capitalist, more so then the u.s. they have a higher tax that allows for citizens to have better health care but the government is extremely hands off when it comes to the business side of things.

  • @anthonykology1728
    @anthonykology1728 Před rokem

    where is the foot traffic going?...east or west?

  • @jurej1
    @jurej1 Před 2 lety

    When you make statements like this and you don't draw a line to which extent this claims are healthy this is very dangerous. In response we can make a video clip The Utopian Myth of democracy when couple of hundred people control(financialy) everything.

  • @hernanmurua8088
    @hernanmurua8088 Před 2 lety

    Remember that a democratic decision of today becomes law for tomorrow so the distribution starts with people that has had incentive to grow but rapidly faces a society that lives out of government tips and any destructive innovation is hindered. This spiral ends up in an extractive society.

  • @nancygawlowicz2562
    @nancygawlowicz2562 Před rokem

    No amount of taxation will make me a great opera singer.

  • @futures2247
    @futures2247 Před 2 lety +1

    as if the private sector isn't corrupt

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      Corrupt relative to Marxist mysticism.

  • @859902
    @859902 Před 2 lety

    Equality of outcome inevitably means all are poor save for the elite. The difference from unequal societies is in the composition of the elite. Proponents of egalitarianism fondly think they will be part of that elite. The distinguishing feature of capitalism versus feudalism or socialism is that it can produce a wide range of different outcomes where most are not poor and a large minority somewhat wealthy with a much smaller minority extremely so.

  • @kentondragon9263
    @kentondragon9263 Před 2 lety

    As the old saying goes: life/the world is unfair🤷‍♀️. Dont complain and cry about the system, learn to beat the system😌

  • @jamespercy8506
    @jamespercy8506 Před 2 lety +1

    China isn't capitalist, it is statist with a modified free-ish market interface module without the constraint of rule-of-law or even rudimentary good faith. Win - win is not in their lexicon. Hegemony is their only creed.

    • @dawnemile4974
      @dawnemile4974 Před 2 lety

      China is a prime example of a society that has succeeded despite not being run on a capitalist system. This really irks the US and so they target China every opportunity they can like any narcissist.

  • @futures2247
    @futures2247 Před 2 lety

    who, where, when did people ask about equality of outcomes? what we can have are systems that help distribute the random luck bestowed upon some and not others.

    • @johannagel4520
      @johannagel4520 Před 2 lety

      You must have been living in a cave for years.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      Primitive savages depend on luck and stay primitive. Capitalism rewards your main enemy: mans independent mind.

    • @futures2247
      @futures2247 Před 2 lety

      @@TeaParty1776 hehe

  • @berniethejet
    @berniethejet Před 2 lety

    'By some measures, already a larger economy than the USA': By the basic and standard measure of PPP, China has been a bigger economy than the USA since 2016.

  • @bagsjr1
    @bagsjr1 Před 2 lety

    hmm wonder if higher taxation and more socialism might work in a population of folks who tend to work harder and more competently than say a country with a lazier population? One can't assume that people taken together as groups are equally competent and virtuous as well.

  • @atwells5754
    @atwells5754 Před 2 lety

    perfect

  • @judii4370
    @judii4370 Před 2 lety

    if the student who doesn't study or even attend but is affirmative action then the student gets all A+ grades and now is equal and may be put in as president someday; nobody said the effort put in should be equal, the effort put in is the strong arm of the political group --- equality means some have lots of stuff and some have nothing, look at 3rd world countries, is that fair? i heard that they are going to change that so that all countries have the same stuff we have

  • @rayshepherd2479
    @rayshepherd2479 Před 2 lety

    Since most ultra rich make most of their income from capital gains and dividends and the Scandinavian countries tax rates on this income is about the same as the US the ultra rich in Scandinavia don't pay higher taxes than ultra rich Americans. In fact the taxes on Capital gains and dividends in California is higher than most other countries.

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 Před 2 lety

      On several lists of economic freedom, the US is maybe 17th. But the US has the most entrepreneurial culture.

  • @nathanngumi8467
    @nathanngumi8467 Před 2 lety

    Word.

  • @eugenemurray2940
    @eugenemurray2940 Před 2 lety

    The only equalty I want
    Is equality on an even playing field
    Individuals only constrained by
    The Rule of Law
    Fair Play
    'I never felt less governed then when under Briish Rule' Mohandes 'Mahatma' Ghandhi

  • @Capitalist_Pig314
    @Capitalist_Pig314 Před rokem

    If you require equality of outcome, how do you get those of the superior ability, drive and ingenuity to keep producing? And that problem is the course why communism or Socialism has never work anywhere

  • @bastiat691
    @bastiat691 Před 2 lety

    Equality of opportunity requires the imposition of equal outcome in the previous generation, it is a Trojan horse.

  • @cagno1
    @cagno1 Před 2 lety +1

    Hay dude National Socialism was to a great degree about preserving the western cannon.

  • @berniethejet
    @berniethejet Před 2 lety

    'Winning the argument every generation' seems to require a propaganda bureau to repeat the same lessons at regular intervals.

  • @bobs4429
    @bobs4429 Před 2 lety

    I grow weary of the growing conservative view that sees the world in terms of threats. No, not weary so much as, well, a feeling of being threatened by it.

    • @nicks40
      @nicks40 Před 2 lety

      If you just get rid of the State, everywhere, then there are no threats left, at least, none that cannot be overcome by the individual.

  • @mountainrambler7926
    @mountainrambler7926 Před 2 lety

    Niall is too complacent in accepting the follies of “democratic decision-making processes.” Thank God we in the US have a Republic!

  • @robertdegruchy160
    @robertdegruchy160 Před 2 lety +1

    Very well presented, he covers the main issues.However, he is not addressing the gorilla on the room, namely the billionaires who take and control most of the pie?

  • @jean-pascalheynemand3271

    No such thing as equality in Nature. Balance yes. But everything else is unfair, unequal, competitive difference.

  • @andrewbaldwin4454
    @andrewbaldwin4454 Před 2 lety

    The title of this episode doesn't really correctly indicate its content. Niall says that by some definitions the Chinese economy is already the world's largest but doesn't say aye or nay to this. He should. Measured on a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis IMF estimates of GDP showed China overtaking the US as number one in 2014, during the Obama-Biden administration in the US. The difference between the two was not great and Chinese dominance may not have been achieved until a year or so later, which would still have been during the Obama-Biden administration. Today, it is undisputable: Chinese GDP is greater than US and Mexican GDP combined and only a little inferior to the three USMCA countries combined. Niall shouldn't give any credence to international rankings of economies that are market-exchange-rate (MER) based, although it seems that he does.

  • @johnritter5951
    @johnritter5951 Před 2 lety

    Here's a shorter way of putting things. I the USA was a publicly traded corporation, would you buy stock in it? See what I mean?