Top Twenty Lessons Learned In 2020
Tyler Durden
Thu, 09/24/2020 – 17:20
Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The American Institute for Economic research,
This year has been a shock.
Here is an early sketch of what I think I’ve learned.
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Governments are fully capable of doing the unthinkable, and doing so suddenly with no exit plan, little consideration of cost, and a callous disregard for individual rights.
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The US Constitution and Bill of Rights are largely irrelevant when governments declare an emergency.
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The business lobby is far less powerful than I had previously assumed.
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Many politicians care more about their personal power than public opinion.
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People in general are less committed to their freedoms than I had previously believed.
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Economic understanding is rare.
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There is no such thing as settled science; scientists disagree, sometimes radically, and many times for political reasons.
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The structure of law and the regime are fully capable of dramatic and even overnight change.
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Influence is mysterious: the media report what fits their preferred narrative and ignore everyone with a different view.
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Professional credentials are useful but not decisive for any argument: in a crisis they are weaponized.
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People under duress, in the shock of lockdown, are capable of stunning lies and cruelty.
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Most people haven’t the slightest clue about how to think about statistics and hard science; for many people, data are mere abstractions.
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Hardly any political lobby or interest group genuinely cares about the poor, working classes, or marginalized groups, at least not enough to put their interests above a political agenda.
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Very often people’s proclaimed “principles” are nothing but social signalling devices.
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The propagation of truth is burdened by disadvantages relative to error and lies.
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Known science is fully capable of vanishing in one generation.
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No matter how seemingly intelligent and impressive are our institutions, they are neither created nor managed by equally intelligent people.
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Markets are adaptive beyond anything I ever imagined possible.
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Psychological health for most people is bound up with possessing rights and freedoms.
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Individual moral courage is the society’s most precious treasure, as rare as it is powerful.