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Jun 4, 2021Liked by Geary Johansen

The more coercion that is applied, the more force used, the more demands and edicts for you to submit and obey, the more you hassle and incarcerate, the more you limit free choices, the more you force associations people don't want, the more you take their money for other people's purposes, the more division and violence you will see.

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Thank you Geary again for your thought provoking article and you ability to go to the emphirical source.

Here in Canada there is another push from the government to do ‘something’ about the ‘Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and 2SLGBTQQIA+’ with the release of the 2021 ‘People National Action Plan:  Ending Violence Against Indigenous Women, Girls, and 2SLGBTQQIA+ People’

There are many similarities with this problem as to the problem in the US which you have nicely laid out. As in Northern Ireland any solution has to come “through their own actions” as you state and the “beneficial absence” of government. Over the past many years in Canada this has been a political football with little I can tell coming to benefit the people it is supposed to help. I see a continuing banter back and forth about details of reports and inaccurate statistics but I can’t find any practical solutions likely because there are no practical solutions that the government can offer. As long as the government is held responsible or feels responsible I can’t see any benefit accruing because any adult has to take responsibility for themselves and then move forward. You can’t move forward by continuing to blame someone else or blame some other entity for your life. Of course there is and will always be racism and bias and you can’t legislate against that. But we can and have enacted laws that have mostly eliminated a system of racism.

By the government continuing to dwell on its manufactured complicity, no growth can happen through its policies.

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My overwhelming concern is caution. As I stated in the title, I still believe government can help, but it needs to be incredibly careful in the way it helps. A grant for a guy to buy a van, for example, if he say wanted to start a fence painting business, would be a good thing- because business start-ups can be incredibly precarious when you find out that all the people in your survey might like your service in principal, but don't have the money to spare until their fencing needs a new coat of Ronseal.

Similarly, I think there is a strong case for helping the working poor with Richard Thaler's Nudge's, encouraging them to save money. It's funny, I was watching an Economics Explained about the Dutch just this morning. Did you know they have one of the highest rates of wealth inequality in the world, despite their low income inequality and larger social safety nets. The main reason is quite simple- when you buy a home and take out a mortgage, you get to deduct the mortgage interest element of your repayment from your income for tax purposes!!! Downstream of this, just think of all the money government saves through people maintaining their own property, instead of being reliant upon public housing. I told a civil service chum, who is staunchly on the Left about this- and his response was "Bloody Hell! No wonder they're so happy!!!"

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Yes you are right about caution and we do have very good systems in place for many people. It is too easy to see the many problems and think there is nothing good being done.

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