NOT disagreeing with you preselctor, your post is the most concise, I'm just adding my thoughts, to answer philibuster.
There's always trade-offs. Some government intervention is necessary to maintain a 'free market' which means there is no such thing as a truly free market. The idea is to minimize government intervention.
+ Just like with the Rights of the People, the best way to do this is to define the role of government in the Free Market and then limit it to just those roles. Government protecting the people from crime and infringement of their rights, I see as a legitimate role of government and doing so maintains people freedom, the same goes for a free market.
A purist, can certainly argue that if the government can stop someone for reasonable cause and detain them for a short period of time, makes them NOT truly free because of government intervention. But the reality is, without government taking reasonable measure to protect the rights of the people, society could easily and likely decsend into choas, where criminals and thugs violate people's rights and you are arguably even less free because of the intervention of others that would steal, attack or oppress you.
The same with the Free Market, a purist would see any government involvement at all as proof it is NOT a free market, reality is, without government protecting people's rights and private property, the free market would could easily and likely collapse into choas from those that would steal, attack and oppress others within the market, arguably making it an even less free market from other outside forces.
Unfortunately, like other things, we have seen bad decisions from Supreme Courts that interpret the gaurantee of rights and limits on government, to mold the intent to a whole new meaning to fit the courts activist views. The Interstate Commerce Act is horribly abused, instead of it being reserved as the Fed being the arbitrator between squables between the states over commerce, its used as an excuse for the Fed Gov to intervene and regulate all sorts of things in Commerce/Business, that the Founding Fathers intended that would NEVER be the role of the Fed Gov.
The natural tendency of a successful business is toward a monopoly. A business which produces an obviously superior product at a cheaper price will eliminate the competition and become a monopoly. That in and of itself isn't bad. The monopoly will be able to stay a monopoly only as long as it continues to produce the superior product at the cheaper price in a theoretical free market. The problem arises when the monopoly uses it's economic clot to maintain the monopoly by temporarily selling at a lose. From the monopoly's point of view it's logical. They worked hard to achieve monopoly status, now it's time to reap the rewards. Government intervention is needed keep the free market working.
+ Mostly agree, in fact, look close at any Monopoly we have ever had that lasted and stood, you'll find Government behind them acting to help build and protect that monopoly. Either through Government Corruption OR quid pro qou that gave an advantage to one or a disadvantage to others. Whether its intended, or unintended consequence. The end result is, without Government Intervention, the Monopoly or virtual Monopoly would Never have happened.
Copyright and patent law is clearly government intervention in the marketplace to encourage innovation and creativity the result of which supports the competition necessary for the free market to operate. But copyright and patent holder campaign funding has encouraged the government to continually extend the length of patents and copyrights which kills free markets.
We may have to agree to disagree on the root of this issue, I see Intellectual Property Rights as nothing more than the logical extension of Private Property Rights. It is a less tangible type of property than most physical items, that is why the laws and handling differ, but like I showed, even for physical private property the laws vary to address the varying tangibility of ownership, i.e. a Deed to a Plot of land versus a widget you carry in your pocket.
As a corrollary, can you NOT argue, Government prosecuting theft from business's is an intervention in the marketplace to encourage the free flow of commerce and the profits of companies that produce the capital? For ever arguement on how intellectual property rights differ from private property, there are just as many arguments about how private property differs in its handling and protection, because of varying tangibility of ownership for that property. That is the crux, its all private property, that as a free nation we have to respect and protect, to maintain that freedom, but how we handle it will vary, because the nature of ownership of the private property varies.
Whether we agree or NOT on the root of copyrights and patents, I think we agree, protecting intellectual property rights is a legitimate role of government in the Free Market.
Free markets tend to become monopolies.
Free Governments tend to become tyrannical. You can apply the correllary of every argument to the same example for Government in a Free Country. It can happen, we can debate the likelyhood, but its NOT a gaurantee it will happen. Actually in practice we see more of a trend of oligarchy develop, its a chicken or the egg argument as to whether its Capitalism or Government Intervention driving that.
Like we've discussed, Monopolies are NOT necessarily bad, in theory, the only way for a Monopoly to stay a monopoly, is to be responsive to the consumer.
Yes, I'm aware of the price battle argument, investiment is a way to battle that and we do see people invest in companies losing money, because they have a superior product, knowing they will reap their rewards after the price war is over and the monopoly could NOT kill the competition.
To much Government Intervention and Regulation, creates Barriers to competition, and only serves to help a Monopoly maintain its monopoly status even being less responsive to consumers. I.E. someone wants to compete with a monopoly, but they have spend months going through red tape, paying for all sorts of gov fees, wait for the gov to clear them after doing impact studies, that can take years, etc, etc. It makes it easy for a Monopoly to sit on its laurrels and NOT worry, it would be years of being in debt and idle before the government will allow them to start to compete with them.
Government intervention is necessary to maintain the free markets.
Too much or too little government intervention kills the free market.
There's always trade-offs.
Like I said before with philibuster. Yes, the examples laid out here can happen, it also happens with lots of government intervention, arguably even more often. It comes down to, which do you think is a safer bet and more effective; the decentralized system of Adam Smith's Invisible Guiding Hand of the Free Market or the Centralized Planning System of Government Intervention, where one size fits all and they'll respond to the market on our own time, and they are NOT held accountable by the market?
This argument about there are NO True Markets, is specious, its NO different than an academic argument over there is NO one that is truly Free, or there are NO true Democracies, etc. Its purist academic arguments in a vacuum, NOT wanting to deal with reality, and the refusal of the purist to see that pragmatist terms of the ideal in practice, is NOT some ignorant position where they never realize the ideal is NOT pure.
I become suspicious of these deconstruct exercises, soem disengenous people with an agenda, usually follow with a reconstruction in a vacuum to support their agenda. philibuster, I have no idea if that was your intent, NOT accussing you of anything. But, if I see the argument, there is NO such thing as a free market, therefore there is NO argument against any Government Intervention. Its a false strawman, the old black helicopter conspiracy tactic of deconstruction and reconstruction in a vacuum, to create a credible example for an incredulous proposition.
IMO, the role of government in commerce is clearly defined and we should limit government to that role. Just like with the People's right. Of course there are gray areas, and in those gray areas, the intent should always be protecting market members rights, setting a level playing field fair to all. Interpreting those gray areas, we should do just like we do with the People's rights, always biasing the benefit of the doubt away from Government and toward the market.