Faux
Business hack John Stossel on Sunday asserted that most government was
unnecessary because companies like Walmart would spontaneously provide
assistance to disaster victims “in many more ways” than the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) could.
“Ever feel like
government makes too many plans that come to naught?” Faux News hack
Tucker Carlson told Stossel during a segment on Faux & Friends. “It’s
kind of a bold idea. You’re saying that not every human activity needs
to be planned from above. Some things spontaneously work themselves out
pretty well.”
According to Stossel, Americans would be better
off with less government and more “spontaneous order,” a term coined by
economist Friedrich Hayek which states that order will naturally emerge
from chaos.
“If you hadn’t seen a skating rink, you would say,
‘No, you need skating police, people go in this direction,’” Stossel
observed. “Think of how much of life is spontaneous… Jazz, there’s no
direction. So much of life is spontaneous, but our instinct is to say,
‘Government, give us a plan.’”
The Faux Business hack said that one example of government over-planning was natural disasters.
“After
Katrina, Walmart and private charities helped people in many more ways
than FEMA did,” Stossel opined. “Because FEMA is incompetent because
government tends to be. But also Walmart everyday needs to know what
people need, and they were ready. They had more weather forecasters than
some of the local governments do.”
“You’re challenging the very idea of Washington, D.C.,” Carlson pointed out. “Good for you.”
“Well, we need some government,” Stossel admitted. “But not much.”
The Week’s Damon Linker argued last year that “spontaneous order” was the “silliest and most harmful of all” libertarian ideas.
Linker
said that the United States had conducted two experiments in
“spontaneous order” in recent years by overthrowing governments in Iraq
and Libya.
“In both cases, spontaneity brought the opposite of
order. It produced anarchy and civil war, mass death and human
suffering,” he wrote. “Order doesn’t just happen, and it isn’t the
product of individual freedom.”
“The libertarian prophets of
‘spontaneous order’ get things exactly backward, sometimes with
catastrophic real-world consequences. Which is why it’s a particularly
bad idea,” Linker concluded.
As for Walmart, the company was
praised for its response to Hurricane Katrina, but experts pointed out
that FEMA had many more responsibilities.
“FEMA has to
prioritize search and rescue, and moving equipment, moving people,
moving medical supplies,” ABC News homeland security expert observed in
2005. “Wal-Mart just has to deliver supplies.”
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