I've been asked to play devil's advocate to a debating team. I have to argue in favour of far right-wing economics (to laymen: this is basically laissez-faire, hands off, no support for the poor, every man for himself kinda thing). I can pick any of it's strengths that I like and can use anything possible to beat them.
But... I can't work find any real strengths that I could use in a debate. :| Just looking over everything I've got written down and it basically boils down to this:-
- Allows the top dogs to reach the top. (Amazingly easily debated against.)
- Capitalistic model has driven world technological progress.
- That's... About it.
- I have a final one that I will never say in this debate because it's basically instalose: "Rich people can make themselves richer."
I cannot find a single real strength for the model. :| They're arguing far left, and I think that - if I don't rely on ad hominem attacks and other logical fallacies that are sadly the best ways to win debates - I'm going to get verbally raped.
Any help, guys?
Argue it from a rights perspective. Make sure you know the constitution of the country you take to be an example or your own country. What laissez-faire does is make all the subjects who operate it in an atomistic individual, which is to say that the majority of the arguments will be individually based and very little of it will be beneficial to the community. One of their arguments is that it's incredibly hard to justify actions through social goal, especially at the expense of personal freedoms.
Take for example, their view on taxes- it's all theft according to them. Money is taken from an individual to be spent somewhere else on someone else who did nothing to earn that money. A common response to this is that's for the greater good, or make society better. The libertarian banana would then say that while this can be true it is nonetheless violating the tax payer's (natural rights*point is debatable and is great to derailing arguments when you feel you're in a corner) right to property. They don't like income tax at all either since they see being employed as the basic means of living and therefore unemployment- long term unemployment- is philosophically synonymous with death to them allowing them to argue that you're basically being taxed to breath or some such.
The Right wing economist will also point out how terrible *ALL* (this point is contentious, some libertarians would say that all governmental activities are essentially wasteful, and that everything the private sector can do, it can do better than the government, therefore the government shouldn't spend beyond basic necessities like the army) governmental services are wasteful. Education, one has argued, is better served through private schools funded by the parents entirely than the state funded ones. Keep in mind, the person who said this was from the US, my impression of the school system over there is pretty bad, but this does not mean that it would necessarily be a better choice. Avoid this point if you know anyone in the education industry or anyone who knows something about it.
Finally, there's a point you must avoid or at least take it on as a last resort. The thing about rights is that the libertarian would see nothing wrong if Rupert Murdoch bought all of the grocery stores in your town and replaced them with vegetarian stores and all the newspapers and placed giant pictures of meat on the front page. It's important to note that your opponents might seize the opportunity and declare that you've merely shorn off the tyranny of the government (
I don't know why this is such a popular statement, you probably shouldn't use it, it doesn't help you) to live under the tyranny of the rich.
For more, I'd like to reference this thread:
http://forums.taleworlds.com/index.php/topic,100451.msg2545299.html#msg2545299The correspondence between Wheem and Swadius is more or less the debate you're going to give, if you hadn't already, except your positron is much better argued for.