I will reply to these posts in more detail later…
But, a few brief comments to begin… I agree that the bottled water industry is a major problem----just another move by a corporation using the “free market” to fill consumer “needs” without concern for the environmental costs of such actions.
To mmyers—
I appreciate the comments----the posting from the Cato Institute is riddled with errors. I would highly recommend avoiding them in searching for useful data and viewpoints. They have a God, and that God is the “free market”—a concept which has never existed in the history of economies. I think the only time you can have a free market is if everyone is selling the same commodity to each other in a state of perfect competition so that consumer choice is truly sovereign. Ie, everyone selling lemonade on their front porches or driveways and the best lemonade and customer service wins…
America has never been a free market country, however. It has always been an oligarchy like every other great empire. The culture, and not the political economy, is democratic in that everyone can think what they will while they somnambulistically consume stuff that corporations make by plundering the Earth and using Third World slave labor. As in the days when Americans were killing the Indians and enslaving the Africans, a landowning class of plantation owners and an Anglophilic collection of Eastern U.S. merchants controlled the fate of the country. In the Civil War, these merchants and soon to be industrialists defeated the chattel slave economy run by the Southern oligarchy. In turn, we got the Industrial Revolution and the untold misery of Gilded Age capitalism run by robber barrons like Carnegie, Vanderbilt, Morgan, Warburg, and Rockefeller. If not for the Progressive Movement and the New Deal, America would easily have become totalitarian (Google Smedley Butler for information on America’s near fascist coup in the mid 1930s)----you see, the rich owners own everything… No free market here at all-----read the 1905 Lochner decision with Oliver Wendell Holmes dissent where he blasts the free market ideology where the baking factory justifies that it can exploit workers because they are “freely” offering their labor according to the dictates of market rationality.
Ask anyone working at Wal-Mart if they “freely” give their labor to receive substandard wages from a corporation whose original owning family is now worth well over $100 billion…
mmyers—I will rebut each of those ten points later, but I first must say that any article which quotes Julian Simon simply doesn’t cut it with me… Simon was a total nut----his book the Ultimate Resource which is probably his defining academic achievement cannot even stand up to the mildest of scrutiny
-------Anyone who says resources are infinite is simply a nut…