George Gilder in City Journal focuses on a glimmer of hope for Capitalism
But what I learned in Jerusalem was that Israel was not only a site for research and outsourcing and the occasional conceptual coup, but the emerging world leader, outside the United States, in launching new companies and technologies. This tiny embattled country, smaller than most American states, is outperforming European and Asian Goliaths ten to 100 times larger. In a watershed moment for the country, Israel in 2007 passed Canada as the home of the most foreign companies on the technology-heavy NASDAQ index; it is now launching far more high-tech companies per year than any country in Europe.The most precious resource in the world economy is human genius, which we may define as the ability to devise significant inventions that enhance survival and prosperity. At any one time, genius is embodied in just a few score thousand people, a creative minority that accounts for most human accomplishment and wealth. Cities and nations rise and thrive when they welcome entrepreneurial and technical genius; when they overtax, criminalize, or ostracize it, they wither.
During the twentieth century, an astounding proportion of geniuses have been Jewish, and the fate of nations from Russia westward has largely reflected how they have treated their Jews. When Jews lived in Vienna and Budapest early in the century, these cities of the Hapsburg Empire were world centers of intellectual activity and economic growth; then the Nazis came to power, the Jews fled or were killed, and growth and culture disappeared with them. When Jews came to New York and Los Angeles, those cities towered over the global economy and culture. When Jews escaped Europe for Los Alamos and, more recently, for Silicon Valley, the world’s economy and military balance shifted decisively. Thus many nations have faced a crucial moral test: Will they admire, reward, and emulate a minority that has achieved towering accomplishments? Or will they writhe in resentment and plot its destruction?
(More...)
7 comments:
Quite a read. It offers hope if we can keep out of the socialist tar pit. I do have my doubts, we may be stuck. I was a bit surprised about G. Bush, I had not thought him to be as capitalist as all that. I suppose the "compassionate conservative" thing rankled and rattled me a bit. I did not realize Israel had made it out of the socialist quagmire, to be honest. Wow was I behind in that.
I do want to see that here, in the US. I would really like to see the US and Israel, together, show the world what it is about. Though there are more reasons to do so than merely for profit margins. My guess is half of their security problems have been solved by their two biggest gains, that is money and technology.
They seem to have produced the chicken and the egg simultaneously, which means it can be done. And they did it bloodlessly. Which does provide some hope.
Sorry if I write too much. Just let me know.
The heart of capitalism is rewarding human achievement. We all benefit when people do great things. So what if the inventors gain even more. People need to put away their envy and class hatred and get an understanding of human nature and how people tick.
The wireless credit card machine we use for our business was made in Israel.
Dom, it is inspiring. We're gonna have to toughen up to be able to hold our heads up alongside Israel.
And,NO, you don't write too much. It's a pleasure to have you commenting here.
Opie, that is close to poetry. Perhaps you could visit our public colleges and high schools to teach this new gospel.
Woodie, I have a pair of ill-fitting underpants that were produced in Indonesia by a malcontent known as Inspector 87.
Ill-fitting underpants? The horrah.
Agreed re: Doom. He is the E.F. Hutton of the new breed around here, in my humble opinion.
Good comments, all. It is encouraging to see Israel prosper, and amidst so much adversity. In an odd way, I think the adversity has focused them. Maybe we can do the same?
Netanyahu is fantastic. Great to have him as PM.
Post a Comment